Physical Review Research (Mar 2020)

Observation of a gel of quantum vortices in a superconductor at very low magnetic fields

  • José Benito Llorens,
  • Lior Embon,
  • Alexandre Correa,
  • Jesús David González,
  • Edwin Herrera,
  • Isabel Guillamón,
  • Roberto F. Luccas,
  • Jon Azpeitia,
  • Federico J. Mompeán,
  • Mar García-Hernández,
  • Carmen Munuera,
  • Jazmín Aragón Sánchez,
  • Yanina Fasano,
  • Milorad V. Milošević,
  • Hermann Suderow,
  • Yonathan Anahory

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevResearch.2.013329
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
p. 013329

Abstract

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A gel consists of a network of particles or molecules formed for example using the sol-gel process, by which a solution transforms into a porous solid. Particles or molecules in a gel are mainly organized on a scaffold that makes up a porous system. Quantized vortices in type-II superconductors mostly form spatially homogeneous ordered or amorphous solids. Here we present high-resolution imaging of the vortex lattice displaying dense vortex clusters separated by sparse or entirely vortex-free regions in β-Bi_{2}Pd superconductor. We find that the intervortex distance diverges upon decreasing the magnetic field and that vortex lattice images follow a multifractal behavior. These properties, characteristic of gels, establish the presence of a novel vortex distribution, distinctly different from the well-studied disordered and glassy phases observed in high-temperature and conventional superconductors. The observed behavior is caused by a scaffold of one-dimensional structural defects with enhanced stress close to the defects. The vortex gel might often occur in type-II superconductors at low magnetic fields. Such vortex distributions should allow to considerably simplify control over vortex positions and manipulation of quantum vortex states.