Melting of "porous" vortex matter.
/ Authors
S. Banerjee, A. Soibel, Y. Myasoedov, M. Rappaport, E. Zeldov, Mariela Menghini, Y. Fasano, F. de la Cruz, C. J. van der Beek, M. Konczykowski
and 1 more author
/ Abstract
Bitter decoration and magneto-optical studies reveal that in heavy-ion irradiated superconductors, a "porous" vortex matter is formed when vortices outnumber columnar defects. In this state ordered vortex crystallites are embedded in the "pores" of a rigid matrix of vortices pinned on columnar defects. The crystallites melt through a first-order transition while the matrix remains solid. The melting temperature increases with density of columnar defects and eventually turns into a continuous transition. At high temperatures a sharp kink in the melting line is found, signaling an abrupt change from crystallite melting to melting of the rigid matrix.
Journal: Physical review letters