4.7 Article

Ultradense Tailored Vortex Pinning Arrays in Superconducting YBa2Cu3O7-δ Thin Films Created by Focused He Ion Beam Irradiation for Fluxonics Applications

Journal

ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALS
Volume 2, Issue 8, Pages 5108-5115

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.9b01006

Keywords

helium ion microscope; cuprate superconductor; vortex pinning lattice; commensurability effects; critical current

Funding

  1. German Academic Scholarship Foundation
  2. Research Foundation Flanders (FWO-Vl)
  3. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) (JSPS-FWO Grant) [VS.059.18N]
  4. MURI Center for Dynamic Magneto-Optics via the Air Force Office of Scientifc Research (AFOSR) [FA9S50-14-1-0040]
  5. Army Research Office (ARO) [73315PH]
  6. Asian Office of Aerospace Research and Development (AOARD) [FA2386-18-1-4045]
  7. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) (Q-LEAP program)
  8. Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) (CREST) [JPMJCR1676]
  9. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) (JSPS-RFBR) [17-52-50023]
  10. RIKEN-AIST Challenge Research Fund

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Magnetic fields penetrate a type II superconductor as magnetic flux quanta, called vortices. In a clean superconductor they arrange in a hexagonal lattice, while by addition of periodic artificial pinning centers many other arrangements can be realized. Using the focused beam of a helium ion microscope, we have fabricated periodic patterns of dense pinning centers with spacings as small as 70 nm in thin films of the cuprate superconductor YBa2Cu3O7-delta. In these ultradense kagome-like patterns, the voids lead to magnetic caging of vortices, resulting in unconventional commensurability effects that manifest themselves as peaks in the critical current and minima in the resistance versus applied magnetic field up to similar to 0.4 T. The various vortex patterns at different magnetic fields are analyzed by molecular dynamics simulations of vortex motion, and the magnetic field dependence of the critical current is confirmed. These findings open the way for a controlled manipulation of vortices in cuprate superconductors by artificial sub-100 nm pinning landscapes.

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