Irreversible flow of vortex matter: polycrystal and amorphous phases

Publication date

2018-10-24T12:01:01Z

2018-10-24T12:01:01Z

2009-12-17

2018-10-24T12:01:01Z

Abstract

We investigate the microscopic mechanisms giving rise to plastic depinning and irreversible flow in vortex matter. The topology of the vortex array crucially determines the flow response of this system. To illustrate this claim, two limiting cases are considered: weak and strong disorder forces. In the first case disorder is strong enough to introduce plastic effects in the vortex lattice. Diffraction patterns unveil polycrystalline lattice topology with dislocations and grain boundaries determining the electromagnetic response of the system. Filamentary flow is found to arise as a consequence of dislocation dynamics. We analyze the stability of vortex lattices against the formation of grain boundaries, as well as the steady-state dynamics for currents approaching the depinning critical current from above, when vortex motion is mainly localized at the grain boundaries. On the contrary, a dislocation description proves no longer adequate in the second limiting case examined. For strong disorder forces, the vortex array appears completely amorphous and no remnant of the Abrikosov lattice order is left. Here we obtain the critical current as a function of impurity density, its scaling properties, and characterize the steady-state dynamics above depinning. The plastic depinning observed in the amorphous phase is tightly connected with the emergence of channel-like flow. Our results suggest the possibility of establishing a clear distinction between two topologically disordered vortex phases: the vortex polycrystal and the amorphous vortex matter.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Cristal·lografia; Crystallography

Publisher

American Physical Society

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.80.224513

Physical Review B, 2009, vol. 80, num. 22, p. 224513

https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.80.224513

Recommended citation

This citation was generated automatically.

Rights

(c) American Physical Society, 2009

This item appears in the following Collection(s)