11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey...

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11 May 2005 Lorentz Center Leiden 1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey University of Florida Collaborators: Ray Goldstein (U Arizona) John DiBartolo (Brooklyn Poly) Salman Ullah (Microsoft) Support from the NSF

Transcript of 11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey...

Page 1: 11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey University of Florida Collaborators: Ray Goldstein (U.

11 May 2005 Lorentz Center Leiden 1

Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors

Alan DorseyUniversity of Florida

Collaborators:Ray Goldstein (U Arizona)John DiBartolo (Brooklyn

Poly)Salman Ullah (Microsoft)

Support from the NSF

Page 2: 11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey University of Florida Collaborators: Ray Goldstein (U.

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Welcome to Florida!

Gainesville

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UF Lightning Research

Prof. Martin UmanProf. Vladimir Rakov

International Center for Lightning Research and Testing (ICLRT)

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Outline

• Interface motion in superconductors

• Interfacial instabilities• Analogies with

dendritic growth• Propagating fronts• Modulated phases and

the intermediate state of type-I superconductors

• Nonequilibrium vortex patterns and thermal instabilities

http://www.fys.uio.no/super/dend/

Page 6: 11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey University of Florida Collaborators: Ray Goldstein (U.

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Free boundary model for the moving superconductor/normal

interface

BDB Bt2

iBni nBDvB )/(

)1( 0 nci vdHB

• In the superconducting region the magnetic field is zero.

• Normal regions: moving interface generates eddy currents (Ampere’s Law plus Ohm’s Law):

• At the interface we have the boundary condition:

• For a flat interface the field at the interface is the critical field; for a curved interface:

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Interfacial (Mullins-Sekerka) instability

• is largest near the bump

nBvn /

B

• A linear stability analysis shows that the growth rate is positive at long wavelengths. Surface tension stabilizes the growth at short wavelengths.

• A similar instability occurs in the dendritic growth of solids.

• Since the normal velocity is largest near the bump, so bumps grow faster!

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Flux expulsion/dendritic growth analogy

TDT Tt2

])/()/([ ''liquidpTsolidpTn nTcDnTcDLv

)1( 0 nmi vdTT

• A piece of solid grows into its supercooled liquid phase. This releases a latent heat L that must diffuse away from the interface for the solid to grow.

• At the interface the rate of heat production is equal to the rate at which heat flows into the solid and liquid.

• The Gibbs-Thomson condition:

Page 9: 11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey University of Florida Collaborators: Ray Goldstein (U.

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Modeling: time dependent Ginzburg Landau theory

222

||)/2(2

])/2([

baem

eit

A

i

)(4 sn JJA

• Coupled nonlinear PDEs for the order parameter and the vector potential:

• Solve numerically using “lattice gauge theory” methods (Frahm, Ullah, Dorsey (1991).

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Propagating front solutions

• DiBartolo and Dorsey (1996): special one dimensional solutions of TDGL equations for an interface.

• Exact solution for special parameter values.

• Matched asymptotics and marginal stability analysis.

• Pulled vs. pushed fronts (Ebert and van Saarloos).

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Competing interactions

•Long range repulsive force: uniform phase•Short range attractive force: compact structures•Competition between forcesinhomogeneous (meso) phase•Ferromagnetic films, ferrofluids, type-I superconductors, block copolymers

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Ferrofluid in a Hele-Shaw cell

•Ferrofluid: colloid of 1 micron spheres. Fluid becomes magnetized in an applied field.

•Hele-Shaw cell: ferrofluid between two glass plates

Surface tension competes with dipole-dipole interaction…

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Results courtesy of Ken Cooper

http://www.its.caltech.edu/~jpelab/Ken_web_page/ferrofluid.html

ferromovie.mov

Page 14: 11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey University of Florida Collaborators: Ray Goldstein (U.

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Modulated phases

Langmuir monolayer (phospholipid and

cholesterol)

Intermediate state of type-I superconductor

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The intermediate state• For thin films complete

flux explusion is energetically unfavorable.

• The sample breaks up into normal and superconducting regions that coexist.

• The domain size is set by a competition between: – Demagnetizing energy

(favors finely divided structure).

– Surface energy (favors a coarse structure).

• Laminar model developed by Landau in 1937.

Page 16: 11 May 2005Lorentz Center Leiden1 Fingering, Fronts, and Patterns in Superconductors Alan Dorsey University of Florida Collaborators: Ray Goldstein (U.

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Current loop model

• Supercurrents circulate on the normal/superconductor boundries.

• There is a long range Biot-Savart interaction that causes branching.

• The instability is regulated on short scales by surface tension.

• Overdamped dynamics proposed by Dorsey and Goldstein (1998).

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Experiments

C. R. Reisen and S. G. Lipson, Phys. Rev. B (2000).Pb-In sample, 3mm diameter, 0.14 mm thick

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Nonequilibrium vortex patterns

• Vortex entry in type-II superconductors often results in “dendrites”.

• Subtle interplay of geometry, thermal effects, and nonlinear IV characteristics.

• Recent theoretical work by I. S. Aranson et al., Physical Review Letters (2005).

Experiments: magnetooptics imagesOf Niobium films

Simulations of Aranson et al.

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Summary

• Fingering: dynamical instabilities during magnetic flux entry (free boundary problem, Mullins-Sekerka instability).

• Fronts: novel propagating front (interface) solutions in time-dependent GL theory.

• Patterns:– Competing interactions: attractive short

range and repulsive long range lead to mesoscale patterns.

– Intermediate state patterns in type-I superconductors.

– Nonequilibrium vortex patterns during field entry and exit.