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Article Dans Une Revue Nature Année : 2001

A Bragg glass phase in the vortex lattice of a type II superconductor

Résumé

Although crystals are usually quite stable, they are sensitive to a disordered environment: even an infinitesimal amount of impurities can lead to the destruction of crystalline order. The resulting state of matter has been a long-standing puzzle. Until recently it was believed to be an amorphous state in which the crystal would break into 'crystallites'. But a different theory predicts the existence of a novel phase of matter: the so-called Bragg glass, which is a glass and yet nearly as ordered as a perfect crystal. The 'lattice' of vortices that contain magnetic flux in type II superconductors provide a good system to investigate these ideas. Here we show that neutron-diffraction data of the vortex lattice provides unambiguous evidence for a weak, power-law decay of the crystalline order characteristic of a Bragg glass. The theory also predicts accurately the electrical transport properties of superconductors; it naturally explains the observed phase transitions and the dramatic jumps in the critical current associated with the melting of the Bragg glass. Moreover, the model explains experiments as diverse as X-ray scattering in disordered liquid crystals and the conductivity of electronic crystals.
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Dates et versions

hal-00957689 , version 1 (10-03-2014)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : hal-00957689 , version 1

Citer

Thierry Klein, I. Joumard, S. Blanchard, Jacques Marcus, R. Cubitt, et al.. A Bragg glass phase in the vortex lattice of a type II superconductor. Nature, 2001, 413, pp.404. ⟨hal-00957689⟩
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