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Superconductivity and Superconductivity and
Quantum CoherenceQuantum CoherenceLent Term 2009
Credits: Christoph Bergemann,
David Khmelnitskii, John Waldram, …
• 12 Lectures: Tues & Thrs 11-12am Mott Seminar Room
• 3 Supervisions, each with one examples sheet
• This is a developing course – feedback is welcome!
Complete versions on course web site:www-qm.phy.cam.ac.uk/teaching.php
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Literature:Literature:J. F. Annett: Superconductivity, Superfluids and Condensatesunified treatment of all three phenomena
J. R. Waldram: Superconductivity of Metals and Cupratesmodern textbook with deep discussions,
including copper oxide superconductors
M. Tinkham: Introduction to Superconductivitytraditional textbook
V. V. Schmidt: The Physics of Superconductorshelpful insights
C. J. Pethick/H. Smith: Bose-EinsteinCondensation (BEC) in Dilute GasesBEC and superfluidity; recent developments
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Outline:Outline:
• Phenomenology of the SuperconductingState (4 lectures)
• Applications of Superconductivity (1)
• Bose-Einstein Condensates (1)
• Superfluidity in 4He (1)
• Quantum Coherence and Bardeen-
Cooper-Schrieffer (BCS) Theory (3)
• Superfluidity in 3He and Unconventional
Superconductivity in Exotic Materials (2)
Macroscopic “Ginzburg-Landau” Treatment
Microscopic Theory
New Developments
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Lecture 1:Lecture 1:
• Historical overview
• Macroscopic manifestation of superconductivity: ρ, χ, C/T
• Meissner effect and levitation
• Type-I and type-II superconductivity
• Superconductivity as an ordered state – Landau theory as a precursor to the Ginzburg-Landau theory
• Literature: Waldram ch. 4 (or equivalent chapters in Annett, Schmidt, or Tinkham)
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Timeline:Timeline:
Unconventional superconductors, Unconventional superconductors, includingincluding
high temperature superconductorshigh temperature superconductors
1970s1970s--nownow
Josephson effect and SQUIDsJosephson effect and SQUIDs1962/641962/64
Superfluidity in Superfluidity in 33HeHe19711971
GinzburgGinzburg--Landau theory of superconductivityLandau theory of superconductivity
Abrikosov vorticesAbrikosov vortices
19501950
1952/571952/57
Prediction of BosePrediction of Bose--Einstein condensation (BEC)Einstein condensation (BEC)19251925
Superfluidity in Superfluidity in 44HeHe
Meissner effectMeissner effect
1927/381927/38
19331933
BEC and BCS in atomic gasesBEC and BCS in atomic gases1990s1990s--nownow
BCS theory of superconductivityBCS theory of superconductivity19571957
Superconductivity in mercurySuperconductivity in mercury19111911
Liquefaction of Liquefaction of 44HeHe19081908
?
Kamerlingh Onnes
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Examples of SuperconductorsExamples of Superconductors
24.5 K
39 K
0.5 K
1.5 K
0.5 K to
164 K
92 K
35K
10 K
9.3 K
4.1 K
of ferromagnetism – p-waveUGe2
Tc above boiling point of nitrogenYBa2Cu3O7-δ
highest Tc to dateHgBa2Ca2Cu3O8+δ
superconducting magnets to ~ 9 TNbTi
superconducting magnets to ~ 20 T
high-Tc s-wave superconductivity
superconductivity on border of antiferromagnetism
Nb3Sn
MgB2
CeCu2Si2
superconductivity on the borderSr2RuO4
high-Tc d-wave superconductivityLa2-xBaxCuO4
highest Tc amongst the elementsNb
first superconductorHg
}carbon based compounds, iron arsenides, ….
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Superconducting elements:Superconducting elements:
ww
w.w
eb
ele
me
nts
.co
m-
ex
am
ple
s s
he
et
88
Basic experimental facts:Basic experimental facts:• The resistivity of a superconductor drops to zero below some
transition temperature Tc
• Immediate corollary: can’t change the magnetic field inside a superconductor
B = 0 B
Switch on external B:
zero field cooled
0 since ,0 curl curl ==−≡−=∂
∂ρρΕ J
t
B
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What if we cool a superconductor in a magnetic field and then switch the field off – do we get something like a permanent magnet?
field cooled
BExperimentally, this does not work – even when field cooled, the superconductor expels the field!
B
field cooled
This is known as the Meissner effect. Superconductivity arises through a thermodynamic phase transition (state depends only on final conditions, e.g., Tand B).
1010
The Meissner effect leads to the stunning levitation effects that underlie many of the proposed technological applications of superconductivity (see examples sheet).
The superconducting state is destroyed above a critical field Hc
Ideal magnetisation curve…
Hc
…and so-called type-II superconductivity(which we’ll discuss later)
Hc1 Hc2
H
M
NB: These curves apply for a magnetic field along a long rod.
B
1111
• anomaly at Tc consistentwith second order phasetransition
• exponential low-Tbehaviour indicative ofenergy gap (explainedby BCS)
• power-law behaviour at low-T in unconventional superconductors (to be discussed later)
• areas match to conserve entropy
The electronic specific heat around the superconducting transition temperature Tc:
exponential in simple
superconductors
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From the form of C/T we find that the entropy S vs. temperature has the following form:
T
S
Tc
The superconducting state has lower entropy than the normal state and is therefore the more ordered state. A general theory based on just a few reasonable assumptions about the order parameter is remarkably powerful. It describes not just BCS superconductors but also the high-Tc superconductors, superfluids, and Bose-Einstein condensates. This is known as Ginzburg-Landau theory.
normal state
superconducting state
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Landau Theory:Landau Theory:For a second order phase transition, the order parameter vanishes continuously at Tc. In the Landau theory one assumes that sufficiently close to Tc the free energy density relative to the normal statecan be expanded in a Taylor series in the order parameter, ψ (assumed for now to be real):
if F is an even function
Where is the free energy minimum?
• for α > 0, the minimum is at ψ = 0 →→→→ disorder
• for α < 0, the minimum is at ψ = ±±±±ψ0 →→→→ order
)0(2
42 >+= βψβ
αψψ )F(
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Free energy curves:
Pic
ture
cre
dit
s:
A.
J. S
ch
ofi
eld
α > 0 α < 0
ψ ψψ0−ψ0
The phase transition takes place at α(Tc) = 0. Thus, a power series expansion of α(T) around Tc may be expected to have the following leading form:
This is enough to describe a second order phase transition, complete with specific heat jump (examples sheet).
F F
0) ( )( >−= aTTa cα
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This description is appropriate for, e.g., a magnetic phase transition where ψ in the magnetization. In the Ginzburg-Landau (GL) theory, however, ψ is assumed to be complex rather than real as is the case for a macroscopic wave function. We will see in a later lecture how a complex order parameter arises naturally from a microscopic theory. The assumptions in the GL theory are:
• ψ can be complex-valued
• ψ can vary in space – but this carries an energy penaltyproportional to
• ψ couples to the electromagnetic field in the same way as an ordinary wavefunction
(Feynman, Lectures III, ch. 21)
Here, A is the magnetic vector potential and q is the relevant charge, which experimentally turns out to be q = –2e.
4422 , ψψψψ →→
2ψ∇
h/iqA−∇→∇
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This provides the first clue that superconductivity has got something to do with electron pairs. The idea of electron pairing is central to the microscopic theory.
A final part in the free energy that must not be forgotten is the relevant magnetic field energy density BM
2/2µ0, where BM=B-BE is due to currents in the superconductor and BE is due to external sources. (Note that when the material is introduced the total field energy density changes from BE
2/2µ0 to B2/2µ0, but BMBE/µ0 is taken up by the external sources (Waldram Ch.6)).
So finally we arrive at the Ginzburg-Landau free energy density:
We have written the free energy so that the gradient term involve an effective mass m = 2me , which is consistent withq = –2e.
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