4.6 Article

Evolution of Shape and Volume Fraction of Superconducting Domains with Temperature and Anion Disorder in (TMTSF)2ClO4

Journal

CRYSTALS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cryst11010072

Keywords

organic superconductors; Beechgard salts; Maxwell-Garnett approximation; high-Tc

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation in the framework of Increase Competitiveness Program of MISiS
  2. RFBR [21-52-12027, 19-02-01000, 21-52-12043]
  3. Basis Foundation for development of theoretical physics and mathematics
  4. MISiS project [K2-2020-001]
  5. K. K. K. the MISiS support project for young research engineers [19-32-90241, 19-31-27001]
  6. [0033-2019-0001]

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In the highly anisotropic organic superconductor (TMTSF)(2)ClO4, embedded superconducting domains were analyzed using the Maxwell-Garnett approximation, revealing an oblate shape influenced by cooling rate and annealing time. The anisotropic resistivity drop at the superconducting onset and anisotropic Tc can be explained by considering the sample's finite size and shape. This theory may be applied to other heterogeneous superconductors with large domain sizes compared to the coherence length, such as cuprates, iron-based, or organic superconductors.
In highly anisotropic organic superconductor (TMTSF)(2)ClO4, superconducting (SC) phase coexists with metallic and spin-density wave phases in the form of domains. Using the Maxwell-Garnett approximation (MGA), we calculate the volume ratio and estimate the shape of these embedded SC domains from resistivity data at various temperature and anion disorder, controlled by the cooling rate or annealing time of (TMTSF)(2)ClO4 samples. We found that the variation of cooling rate and of annealing time affect differently the shape of SC domains. In all cases the SC domains have oblate shape, being the shortest along the interlayer z-axis. This contradicts the widely assumed filamentary superconductivity along the z-axis, used to explain the anisotropic superconductivity onset. We show that anisotropic resistivity drop at the SC onset can be described by the analytical MGA theory with anisotropic background resistance, while the anisotropic Tc can be explained by considering a finite size and flat shape of the samples. Due to a flat/needle sample shape, the probability of percolation via SC domains is the highest along the shortest sample dimension (z-axis), and the lowest along the sample length (x-axis). Our theory can be applied to other heterogeneous superconductors, where the size d of SC domains is much larger than the SC coherence length xi, e.g., cuprates, iron-based or organic superconductors. It is also applicable when the spin/charge-density wave domains are embedded inside a metallic background, or vice versa.

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