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Suprafroth in type-I superconductors

Ruslan Prozorov, Andrew F. Fidler, Jacob R. Hoberg & Paul C. Canfield

Ames Laboratory and Department of Physics and Astronomy, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA


Abstract

The structure and dynamics of froths have been subjects of intense interest owing to the desire to understand the behaviour of complex systems where topological intricacy prohibits exact evaluation of the ground state. The dynamics of a traditional froth involves drainage and drying at the cell boundaries; thus, it is irreversible. Here, we report a new member of the froth family: suprafroth, in which the cell boundaries are superconducting and the cell interior is normal, or non-superconducting. Despite having a very different microscopic origin, topological analysis of the structure of the suprafroth shows that the same statistical laws, such as those of von Neumann and of Lewis apply to a suprafroth. Furthermore, for the first time in the analysis of froths, there is a global measurable property, the magnetic moment, which can be directly related to the suprafroth structure. We propose that this suprafroth is a model system for the analysis of the complex physics of two-dimensional froths—with magnetic field and temperature as external (reversible) control parameters.


Published: Nature Physics 4, 327 - 332 (2008)
Published online: 2 March 2008 | doi:10.1038/nphys888
http://www.nature.com/nphys/journal/v4/n4/full/nphys888.html
This work was performed during summer 2007 in Ames. First appeared in: http://arxiv.org/abs/0801.1922


Suprafroth phase diagram

Suprafroth phase diagram

Suprafroth formation

Penetration and exit of the magnetic field into Pb single crystal disc (diameter 5 mm, thickness 1 mm). T = 4.2 K after ZFC.


 

how we counted polygonal cells


Coarsening of the Suprafroth


elementary processes of cell merging and switching

Another example of coarsening

 


© Ruslan Prozorov, April 2008