Creep-enhanced vortex pinning revealed through nonmonotonic relaxation of the Campbell length


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2025-02-01

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Journal Article

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Abstract

We study the effects of flux creep on the linear AC response of the vortex lattice in single crystals Ca3Ir4Sn13 by measuring the Campbell penetration depth, λC(T,H,t). Thermal fluctuations release vortices from shallow pinning sites, only for them to become re-trapped by deeper potential wells, causing an initial increase of the effective Labusch parameter, which is proportional to the pinning well curvature. This effect cannot be detected in conventional magnetic relaxation measurements but is revealed by our observation of a nonmonotonic time evolution of λC(T,H,t), which directly probes the average curvature of the occupied pinning centers. The time evolution of λC(T,H,t) was measured at different temperatures in samples with different densities of pinning centers produced by electron irradiation. The curves can be collapsed together when plotted on a logarithmic time scale t→Tln(t/t0) confirming that the time evolution is driven by flux creep. The λC(T,H,t) is hysteretic with a noticeable nonmonotonic relaxation in the presence of a vortex density gradient (after zero-field cooling), but is monotonic after field cooling, where the vortex density is uniform. This result quantitatively corroborates the novel picture of vortex creep based on the strong pinning theory.

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published

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111 (5)

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54507

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American Physical Society

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