Skoltech is an international graduate research-focused university that was founded by the group of world-renowned scientists in 2011. Skoltech's curriculum focuses on technology and innovation, offering Master's programs in 11 technological disciplines. Students receive rigorous theoretical and practical training, design their own research projects, participate in internships and gain entrepreneurial skills in English. The faculty is comprised of current researchers with international accreditation and achievements.

Scientists explain the low-temperature anomaly in superconductors

An international group of scientists, including a researcher from Skoltech, has completed an experimental and theoretical study into the properties displayed by strongly disordered superconductors at very low temperatures. Following a series of experiments, the scientists put forward a theory which effectively describes the previously inexplicable anomalies encountered in superconductors. The results of the study were published in Nature Physics.

The phenomenon of superconductivity was discovered in 1911 by a group of scientists led by Dutch physicist Heike Kamerlingh Onnes. Superconductivity means complete disappearance of electrical resistance in a material when it is cooled down to a specific temperature, resulting in the magnetic field being forced out from the material. Of particular interest to scientists are strongly disordered superconductors, whose atoms do not form crystal lattices. From the practical standpoint, strongly disordered superconductors hold great potential for quantum computer development.

At very low temperatures, superconductors display an anomaly which could not be explained in terms of the classical theory of superconductivity.

This anomaly concerns the temperature dependence of the maximal magnetic field which is still consistent with superconducting behavior of the material. This maximum field, also referred to as the “upper critical” field, always increases as the sample temperature declines, whereas in regular superconductors it nearly stops growing at temperatures several times lower than the superconducting transition temperature. For example, in the case of amorphous indium oxide films used in this study and becoming superconducting at 3 K (-270 oC), one would expect the critical magnetic field to stop growing at temperatures below 0.5 K. However the experiment indicates that the critical field keeps growing even as the temperature drops to the lowest possible values (about 0.05 K in this experiment), and its growth shows no signs of saturation.

Scientists from Skoltech, Landau Institute for Theoretical Physics, Institut Néel (France), Weizmann Institute of Science (Israel) and the University of Utah (USA) demonstrated that the anomaly is caused by thermal fluctuations of quantum Abrikosov vortices. The magnetic field that penetrates into the disordered superconductor has the form of vortices, i.e. tubes, each carrying magnetic flux equal to the fundamental value hc/2e, where h is the Plank constant, c is the speed of light, and e is the electron charge.

At absolute zero, these vortices are immobile and rigidly attached to the atom structure, while any nonzero temperature  leads to fluctuations of  the vortex tubes  around    home bases.   The strength of these fluctuations grow with temperature, and this results in a decrease in the magnetic field that can be applied to a material without affecting its superconducting properties.

“We have developed a  theory  of  the effect of thermal fluctuations of Abrikosov vortices upon the value of the upper critical field, which helped us to establish a relationship between two different types of measurements,” says Mikhail Feigelman, Principal Research Scientist at Skoltech and Deputy Director at Landau institute for Theoretical Physics.

Gaining an insight into the behavior of strongly disordered superconductors is essential for their successful use in superconducting quantum bits – key elements of quantum computers. It became obvious a few years ago that multiple applications in this field require very small elements with high inductance (electric inertia), and the strongly disordered superconductors are the best fit for such “super-inductance” elements. “Understanding of the behavior of these materials will help create superconducting  quantum bits highly isolated  from  external noise,” says Feigelman.

Share on VK