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Structure in the mixed phase Gautam I. Menon IMSc, Chennai, India The Problem • Describe structure in a compact manner • Correlation functions • Distinguish ordered and disordered states. Also unusual orderings: hexatic Information: Flux-line coordinates as functions of time Vortex Structures • Lines/tilted lines • Pancake vortices in layered systems in fields applied normal to the layers • Josephson vortices in layered systems for fields applied parallel to the planes • Vortex chains and crossing lattices for layered systems in general tilted fields Address via correlation functions Probability of finding a “pancake” vortex a specified distance away from another one Correlation Functions Defines average density at r: Sum over all particles A correlation function Related to the probability of finding a particle at r1, given a distinct particle at r2 The two-point correlation function in a fluid depends only on the relative distance between two points, by rotational and translational invariance. Correlation Functions II Brackets denote a thermodynamic average Defines a structure factor From the previous definition of (r) In terms of Fourier components of the density Correlation Functions in a Solid This sum is over lattice sites. It is non-zero only if q=G (a reciprocal lattice vector), in which case it has value N, i.e. (q) = Nq,G Implies Correlation Functions III Inserting the definition In terms of n2 Correlations IV Defines g(r) From g(r), S(q) Just removes an uninteresting q=0 delta-function Why are correlation functions interesting? Experiments measure them! Theorists like them …… The generic scattering experiment measures precisely a correlation function and from there g(r) Physical Picture of g(r) Area under first peak measures number of neighbours in first coordination shell Scattering Intensities as functions of q Melting from Neutron Scattering Bragg spots go to rings: Evidence for a melting transition Ling and collaborators The Disordered Superconductor • Larkin/Imry/Ma: No translational long-range order in a crystal with a quenched disordered background. • Natterman/Giamarchi/Le Doussal: This doesn’t preclude a more exotic order, power-law translational correlations The Bragg Glass Different types of Ordering What does long range order mean? What does quasi-long range order mean? What does short-range order mean? The Bragg Glass proposal Precise consequence for small angle neutron scattering experiments: S(q) decay about (quasi-) Bragg spots More exotic forms of ordering Hexatics • In 2-d systems, thermal fluctuations destroy crystalline LRO except at T=0. Positional order decays as a power law at low T • But, orientational long-range order can exist at finite but low temperatures Hexatics • In the liquid, short range order in positional and orientational correlations • How do power-law translational order and the orientational long-range order go away as T is increased? • Must be a transition – one or more? Hexatics: Nelson/Halperin • Two transitions out of the low T phase • Intermediate hexatic phase, power-law decay of orientational correlations, shortranged translational order. • Topological defects: transitions driven by dislocation and disclination unbinding Orientational Correlations Hexatic Hexatic vs Fluid Structure Muon-Spin Rotation The -SR Method I Positively charged muons from an accelerator Muons polarized transverse to applied magnetic field. Implanted within the sample What the muons see Muon Spin Rotation II Muons precess in magnetic field due to vortex lines Muons are unstable particles. Decay into positrons, anti-neutrinos and gamma rays Muon Spin Rotation III Muon lifetime » 10-6 s. Muon decay ! positron emitted preferentially with respect to muon polarization. Emitted positron polarization recorded Muon Spin Rotation IV The Principle: Can reconstruct the local magnetic field from knowledge of the polarization state of the muon when it decays Need to average over a large number of muons for good statistics Muons are local probes Muon Spin Rotation V The magnetic field distribution function Moments of the field distribution function Moments contain important information, obtain l Muon-Spin Rotation Field at point r Density of vortex lines In Fourier space. A is the area of the system Muon Spin Rotation II Flux quantum Muon Spin Rotation VI Assuming a perfect lattice The sum is over reciprocal lattice vectors of a triangular lattice Muon-Spin Rotation Spectra _ <ΔB>1 λ2 Sonier, Brewer and Kiefl, Rev. Mod. Phys. 72, 769 (2000). The rate of muon depolarisation in zero-field µSR (ZF-µSR) is a sensitive probe for spontaneous internal magnetic fields. 0.1G 0.05G MgCNi3 This experiment: •no spontaneous fields present greater than ~0.03G above 2.5K MgCNi3 ns/m*l-2 Results: •Tc=7K • Functional form implies s-wave gap Important information about the superconducting gap Results from -Spin Rotation Underdoped LSCO, Divakar et al. Muon Spin Rotation LSCO Why do line-widths increase with field? Strong disorder in-plane, almost rigid rods The “true” vortex glass U.K. Divakar et al. PRL (2004) Phase Behavior from SR Probing the glassy state and its local correlations Lee and collaborators Lee and collaborators Lee and collaborators Menon, Drew, Lee, Forgan, Mesot, Dewhurst ++….. Three body correlations in the flux-line glass phase Nontrivial Information about the Nature of superconductivity: Uemura Plot NMR and the Mixed Phase NMR as a Mixed State Probe Information obtained is virtually identical to that obtained in Muon-Spin Rotation But the probe is different NMR as a Vortex Probe I • Interaction of nuclear magnetic moment with local magnetic field splits nuclear energy levels • Nuclear magnetic dipole transitions excited among these levels by applying a RF field of an appropriate frequency. • When the frequency of the RF field is such that the energy is equal to the energy separation between the quantum states of the nuclear spin, energy absorbed. The resulting resonance can be detected. NMR as a Vortex Probe • Since the distances between similar nuclei in a superconductor are small relative to vortex separation, sample n(B) by measuring fields at the sites of nuclei. • Nuclei uniformly distributed, so sampling is volume-weighted. NMR as a Vortex probe III:Method • In “pulsed NMR” observe time-dependent transverse nuclear polarization or ``free induction decay'' of nuclear polarization. • Here an RF pulse is applied to rotate nuclear spins from the direction of the local magnetic field . When the RF field is switched off, nuclear spins perform a free precession around the local field and relax back to their initial direction • The frequency of the nuclear spin precession is a measure of the local field • In this technique, different precession frequencies are observed simultaneously. NMR as a Vortex Probe IV: Limitations • Several limitations and added difficulties associated with the NMR technique which are overcome in a SR experiment. • Because the skin depth of the RF field probe is small, NMR only probes the sample surface. Often the surface has many imperfections, so strong vortex-line pinning and a disordered vortex lattice • The penetration depth of the RF field also limits the range over which the vortex lattice can be sampled. Plus additional sources of broadening. Magnetic Decoration Decoration Experiments Evaporate magnetic material (fine ferromagnetic grains) onto the surface of the sample Image Essmann and Trauble (1968) Decoration Data YBCO MgB2 Magnetic Decoration • Several issues: Nature of ordering, how good are the lattice which are formed • Hexatic phases • Correlation between top and bottom of the sample – how do vortex lines thread the sample? • Glassy phases, short-range order • Melting? Flux-line movement across short times Delaunay Triangulation Fasano et al, PRB’02 Domain States? Problems? • • • • • Confined really to low fields Not bulk, only surface information Useless for dynamics – only static pictures Yet .. some indicator of lattice quality Orientational order at surfaces .. maybe the best way of looking at it Finally .. • The structural probes I talked about all complement each other • Each provides valuable information, yet misses many other important things • Probing at this “mesoscopic” scale is surprisingly difficult, considering that we can image the structure of complex protein molecules to a precision of a few Angstrom ……………… food for thought.