2006
DOI: 10.1103/physrevb.73.069903
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Publisher's Note: Dendritic and uniform flux jumps in superconducting films [Phys. Rev. B73, 014512 (2006)]

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Cited by 35 publications
(62 citation statements)
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“…A viable alternative to obtain information about the spatial and temporal evolution of the dendritic flux avalanches is to carry out simulations of their dynamics. The origin of dendritic avalanches in superconducting films is a thermomagnetic instability mechanism due to the Joule heating created by vortex motion and the consequent reduction of the critical current density as the temperature increases [5,35]. The instability is also a consequence of the nonlinear material characteristics of type II superconductors, which is conventionally approximated by a power law…”
Section: Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A viable alternative to obtain information about the spatial and temporal evolution of the dendritic flux avalanches is to carry out simulations of their dynamics. The origin of dendritic avalanches in superconducting films is a thermomagnetic instability mechanism due to the Joule heating created by vortex motion and the consequent reduction of the critical current density as the temperature increases [5,35]. The instability is also a consequence of the nonlinear material characteristics of type II superconductors, which is conventionally approximated by a power law…”
Section: Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Besides, since high electric fields are known to trigger thermomagnetic avalanches [6,15,16], it is thus likely that thin superconductors with concave corners are far more susceptible to the occurrence of such dramatic events than specimens with convex corners or without corners at all. Notice that this concept applies equally to a superconductor with a square hole filled with flux: if the magnetic pressure pushes the flux trapped in the hole to invade the superconducting frame, it would thus have preferential directions, defined by the inner corners.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6 It has been demonstrated that the insertion of arrays of ADs in a superconducting film can lead, at high temperatures, to an increase of the critical current. 6 Unfortunately, at low temperatures, such PCs facilitate the proliferation of flux channeling [7][8][9][10] leading to unwanted instabilities of thermomagnetic origin 11,12 which render the superconductor impractical. A good compromise between strong pinning and lack of channeling can be achieved by introducing a quasiperiodic array of PCs, as suggested theoretically by Misko et al [13][14][15] and confirmed experimentally by Kemmler et al 16 and Silhanek et al 17 This aperiodic distribution of pinning centers may be further optimized by matching it to the typically non-uniform distribution of vortices.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the mechanism has recently also been shown to give localised, fingering instabilities. 14,15 Indeed, the instability threshold field predicted from this model was recently 16 shown to agree quantitatively with measurements in both Nb and MgB 2 films.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 59%