CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. - Ultrathin superconducting wires can withstand
stronger magnetic fields than larger wires made from
the same material, researchers now report. This finding
may be useful for technologies that employ superconducting
magnets, such as magnetic resonance imaging.
As described in the Jan. 14
issue of the journal Physical Review Letters, researchers
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
have created high-quality superconducting wires with
molecular dimensions, and measured their behavior
in magnetic fields of various strengths. The observational
results have confirmed that theories developed for
bulk superconductors also apply to molecular-scale
superconductors.
"Our experimental results
show an excellent agreement with the theory of pair-breaking
perturbations, even at high magnetic fields,"
said Alexey Bezryadin, a professor of physics at Illinois.
"The theory takes into account both spin and
orbital contributions."
To study this phenomenon, the
researchers began by placing a single-wall carbon
nanotube across a narrow trench (about 100 nanometers
wide) etched in the surface of a silicon wafer. The
nanotube was then coated with a thin film of superconducting
material (molybdenum-germanium), chilled below its
critical temperature, and its properties measured
in the presence of a magnetic field.
"Usually, when you apply
a magnetic field to a superconductor, the field suppresses
or even destroys the superconductivity," Bezryadin
said. "The magnetic field pulls apart the two
electrons forming Cooper pairs and also rotates their
spins. As the superconductor becomes smaller, however,
the destructive effects of the magnetic field become
weaker."
The magnetic field showed a
remarkably weak effect on nanowires, the researchers
report. Both the orbital and the spin pair-breaking
effects were strongly suppressed in the nanowires.
The orbital effect was weak because of the small dimensions
of the wire (about 10 nanometers in diameter) and
the spin effect was weakened by spin-orbit interactions.
"One should not set a
goal of reducing the wire's diameter indefinitely,
however," Bezryadin said. "As the diameter
is decreased, disorder and boundary effects become
more and more important. These factors also weaken
superconductivity."
In fact, the researchers' results
show that thin wires do not really have zero resistance,
as bulk samples do. They also show that the thinner
the wire the higher its electrical resistance is.
Because nanoscale superconductors
don't repel magnetic fields, they could prove useful
in a variety of superconducting applications. By incorporating
nanowires as filaments in bigger superconducting wires,
for example, more current could be carried without
being destroyed by a magnetic field.
"Again, one needs to optimize
the diameters of the wires in order to produce cables
with the highest ability to carry strong currents
and withstand strong magnetic fields," Bezryadin
said. "The nanowire should not be too thick,
in order to be less sensitive to magnetic fields;
but it also should not be too thin, in order to be
fully superconducting. A correct balance should be
achieved."
The work was performed by Bezryadin,
postdoctoral research associate Andrey Rogachev and
graduate research assistant Anthony Bollinger.
Funding came from the National Science Foundation,
the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation and the U.S. Department of Energy.
Note: To reach Alexey Bezryadin,
call 217-333-9580; e-mail:
bezryadi@uiuc.edu.
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