1997
DOI: 10.1103/physrevlett.78.1134
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Critical Current Suppression in a Superconductor by Injection of Spin-Polarized Carriers from a Ferromagnet

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Cited by 271 publications
(132 citation statements)
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“…LCMO is a relatively bad metal and many collision events will result in electrons being scattered into the YBCO. These electrons will be highly spin polarized and are expected to cause T c depression by pair breaking as previously discussed by other authors [40][41][42] if the YBCO thickness is smaller than the spin diffusion length, l S . An estimate of l S in YBCO can be obtained using the relation l S = ͑l 0 v F S ͒ 0.5 , 41 where S is the spin-polarized quasiparticle diffusion time, v F is the Fermi velocity, and l 0 is the electron mean free path.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…LCMO is a relatively bad metal and many collision events will result in electrons being scattered into the YBCO. These electrons will be highly spin polarized and are expected to cause T c depression by pair breaking as previously discussed by other authors [40][41][42] if the YBCO thickness is smaller than the spin diffusion length, l S . An estimate of l S in YBCO can be obtained using the relation l S = ͑l 0 v F S ͒ 0.5 , 41 where S is the spin-polarized quasiparticle diffusion time, v F is the Fermi velocity, and l 0 is the electron mean free path.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 80%
“…(14). In the parallel magnetization alignment, there is no spin accumulation and the current I 0 is given by the familiar result for N-S-N systems with the total N-S junction conductance g ↑ + g ↓ :…”
Section: Theoretical Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an earlier theoretical work, 5 this effect was studied in the zero-bias limit. Several recent spin injection experiments [6][7][8][9] have been done with high-T c superconductors. Common to both ferromagnetconventional and high-T c superconductor junctions, the subgap conductance at a given bias is suppressed due to the suppression of AR by the spin splitting of energy band in the ferromagnet.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%