Intrinsic Pinning in Magnetic Iron-Based Superconductors; a Route to High Critical Current Conductors at High Magnetic Fields
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Bath
Department Name: Physics
Abstract
The discovery of superconductivity by Kamerlingh Onnes in 1911 was one of the most remarkable discoveries of the 20th century. A superconductor is a material that can carry large electrical currents without any resistance, that is without losing any energy. Although superconductors offered clear benefits for the transmission of electrical power, many problems needed to be solved before they could find mainstream applications. The first discovered superconductors had to be cooled to extremely low temperatures, close to absolute zero on the Kelvin scale, requiring the development of suitable cryogenic cooling systems which themselves had significant energy losses. Since the discovery of copper oxide-based superconductors in 1986 and iron-based superconductors in 2006 with much higher operation temperatures, this problem has been largely solved. However, we now know that only certain types of superconducting materials, so-called 'type II' ones, are capable of operation at the very high magnetic fields needed for medical magnetic resonance imaging or magnetic confinement in fusion reactors. However, these 'type II' materials are only able to achieve this by allowing tiny tubes of magnetic field called vortices to enter them which start to generate heat (and lose energy) if they are driven into motion by large flowing supercurrents. Fortunately nature has found a solution to this problem, and vortices can become trapped at defects present in the material preventing them from moving and losing energy. Developing high current superconducting wires therefore requires introducing as many defects into the material as possible without significantly degrading other useful superconducting properties. Even then the current carrying capacity of superconductors at very high magnetic fields (when they become flooded with many vortices) can still be too low for intended applications. In this project we will investigate new types of iron-based superconductors that have recently been discovered in which magnetism and superconductivity coexist. This behaviour is very unusual as magnetism and superconductivity are normally antagonistic phenomena; they involve opposite arrangements of the quantum spins of electrons. Each electron can be visualised as having a tiny compass 'needle' (the spin) attached to it; in ferromagnets all the 'needles' point in the same direction, while in conventional superconductors the electrons form pairs in which the 'needles' point in opposite directions. Remarkably, in these new iron-based materials the presence of ferromagnetism does not destroy superconductivity, and a patchwork of regions called domains where the magnetic 'needles' point in different directions coexists with the superconducting state. These magnetic domains and the boundaries between them represent a new type of defect that can strongly trap vortices, leading to enhanced current carrying capacities, even in very high magnetic fields.
In this project we will bring together a team of experts with a diverse range of skills that can grow, pattern, measure and undertake theoretical studies on magnetic iron-based superconductors. We will carefully investigate how the patchwork of magnetic domains present can trap superconducting vortices and control their dynamic properties and will develop advanced theoretical models to understand our results. Once the conditions have been established for achieving the highest current densities at high magnetic fields we will apply them to iron-based superconducting thin films grown by our partner in Karlsruhe (Germany) with the ultimate goal of realising high performance commercial wires that can be produced by very low-cost methods. Although the main motivation for this project is to develop new materials that meet the requirements for key applications, we will also generate a lot of new scientific knowledge that will be of great value to the wider research community working on superconducting materials.
In this project we will bring together a team of experts with a diverse range of skills that can grow, pattern, measure and undertake theoretical studies on magnetic iron-based superconductors. We will carefully investigate how the patchwork of magnetic domains present can trap superconducting vortices and control their dynamic properties and will develop advanced theoretical models to understand our results. Once the conditions have been established for achieving the highest current densities at high magnetic fields we will apply them to iron-based superconducting thin films grown by our partner in Karlsruhe (Germany) with the ultimate goal of realising high performance commercial wires that can be produced by very low-cost methods. Although the main motivation for this project is to develop new materials that meet the requirements for key applications, we will also generate a lot of new scientific knowledge that will be of great value to the wider research community working on superconducting materials.
Organisations
- University of Bath (Lead Research Organisation)
- University of Tokyo (Collaboration, Project Partner)
- Antwerp University Hospital (Collaboration)
- Argonne National Laboratory (Collaboration, Project Partner)
- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Collaboration)
- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) (Project Partner)
Publications
Christensen D
(2024)
2024 roadmap on magnetic microscopy techniques and their applications in materials science
in Journal of Physics: Materials
Curran PJ
(2023)
The search for spontaneous edge currents in Sr2RuO4 mesa structures with controlled geometrical shapes.
in Scientific reports
| Description | Argonne National Laboratories, supply of antiferromagnetic RbEuFe4As4 superconducting single crystals |
| Organisation | Argonne National Laboratory |
| Department | Physics Division |
| Country | United States |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Argonne National Laboratories are providing us with high quality RbEuFe4As4 single crystals for our investigations of the coexistence of superconductivity and helical antiferromagnetism. Our Bath group will be performing, magnetometry, magnetic relaxation and Hall array magnetometry to understand the vortex dynamics and critical state. We will also be imaging vortex stuctures by scanning Hall microscopy. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Argonne National Laboratories are growing high quality RbEuFe4As4 single crystals which exhibit the coexistence of superconductivity and helical antiferromagnetism. They are providing these to us for our own physical studies of vortex dynamics and the critical state in this remarkable material. |
| Impact | Observing the Suppression of Superconductivity in RbEuFe4As4 by Correlated Magnetic Fluctuations, D. Collomb, S. J. Bending, A. E. Koshelev, M. P. Smylie, L. S. Farrar, J. K. Bao, D. Y. Chung, M. G. Kanatzidis, W. K. Kwok, U. Welp, Physical Review Letters 26, 157001 (2021). |
| Start Year | 2019 |
| Description | Karlesruhe Instutute of Technology; Supply of Ferromagnetic Fe-based superconducting tapes |
| Organisation | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology |
| Country | Germany |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology are providing us with EuFe2(As1-xPx)2 thin film tapes for our investigations of the coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism. Our Bath group will be performing, critical current density measurements, magnetometry, magnetic relaxation and Hall array magnetometry to understand the vortex dynamics and critical state. We will also be imaging vortex structures by scanning Hall microscopy. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Karlsruhe Institute of Technology are growing high quality EuFe2(As1-xPx)2 thin film tapes which exhibit the coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism. They are providing these to us for our own physical studies of the critical current density, vortex dynamics and the critical state in this remarkable material. |
| Impact | None up to now. |
| Start Year | 2023 |
| Description | University of Antwerp |
| Organisation | Antwerp University Hospital |
| Country | Belgium |
| Sector | Hospitals |
| PI Contribution | Performed experiments in mesoscopic superconductivity and sa,ples exhibiting coexisting superconductivity and magnetism. |
| Collaborator Contribution | Milorad Milosevic performed Ginzburg-Landau and analytic calculations to understand our experiments. |
| Impact | Spontaneous symmetry breaking in vortex systems with two repulsive lengthscales, P.J. Curran, W.M. Desoky, M.V. Milosevic, A. Chaves, J.-B. Laloe, J.S. Moodera, S.J. Bending, Scientific Reports 5, 15569 (2015). Rayleigh instability of confined vortex droplets in critical superconductors, I. Lukyanchuk, V. M. Vinokur, A. Rydh, R. Xie, M. V. Miloševic, U. Welp, M. Zach, Z. L. Xiao, G. W. Crabtree, S. J. Bending, F. M. Peeters & W. K. Kwok, Nature Physics 11, 21 (2015). |
| Start Year | 2006 |
| Description | University of Tokyo; Supply of EuFe2(As1-xPx)2 Superconducting Single Crystals |
| Organisation | University of Tokyo |
| Country | Japan |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | The University of Tokyo is providing us with high quality EuFe2(As1-xPx)2 single crystals for our investigations of the coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism. Our Bath group will be performing, magnetometry, magnetic relaxation and Hall array magnetometry to understand the vortex dynamics and critical state. We will also be imaging vortex structures by scanning Hall microscopy. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The University of Tokyo is growing high quality EuFe2(As1-xPx)2 single crystals which exhibit the coexistence of superconductivity and ferromagnetism. They are providing these to us for our own physical studies of vortex dynamics and the critical state in this remarkable material. |
| Impact | None published yet |
| Start Year | 2023 |
