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Magnetization • magnetization or magnetic polarization is the vector field that expresses the density of permanent or induced magnetic dipole moments in a magnetic material. • Net magnetization results from the response of a material to an external magnetic field. • Magnetization is not always uniform within a body, but rather varies between different points. BCS THEORY • BCS theory is the first microscopic theory of superconductivity since its discovery in 1911. It explains, • The interaction of phonons and electrons • Cooper pairs : A key conceptual element in this theory is the pairing of electrons close to the Fermi level into Cooper pairs through interaction with the crystal lattice. • Superconducting Energy Gap Phonon • A phonon is a quantum mechanical description of an elementary vibration motion in which a lattice of atoms or molecules uniformly oscillates at a single frequency. • When an electron is advancing through a path in between two sets of ions in the lattice. • Electron attracts the nearby +ve charges and the lattice get distorted. • This distortion produce some density variation in the crystal. • It will propagate like a wave Cooper Pairs • Cooper pair is a pair of electrons (or fermions) bound together at low temperatures in a certain manner first described in 1956 by American physicist Leon Cooper • An electron in a metal normally behaves as a free particle. The electron is repelled from other electrons due to their negative charge, but it also attracts the positive ions that make up the rigid lattice of the metal. • This attraction distorts the ion lattice, moving the ions slightly toward the electron, increasing the positive charge density of the lattice in the vicinity. Cooper Pairs • This positive charge can attract other electrons. At long distances, this attraction between electrons due to the displaced ions can overcome the electrons' repulsion due to their negative charge, and cause them to pair up. • The rigorous quantum mechanical explanation shows that the effect is due to electron–phonon interactions. Superconducting Energy Gap • Minimum energy required to break up cooper pairs or the energy required to separate the electrons apart is called superconducting energy gap. • When the temperature increases, energy gap decreases. • When T = Tc , this energy gap become zero. TYPES OF SUPERCONDUCTORS TYPE 1 : Lead, Tin, Hg TYPE 2: Niobium, Germanium Josephson Junction • A Josephson junction is made up of two superconductors, separated by a non superconducting layer so thin that electrons can cross through the insulating barrier. • The flow of current between the superconductors in the absence of an applied voltage is called a Josephson current. • The movement of electrons across the barrier is known as Josephson tunneling. SQUID SQUID • A superconducting quantum interference device (SQUID) is a mechanism used to measure extremely weak signals. • Using a device called a Josephson junction, a SQUID can detect a change of energy as much as 100 billion times weaker than the electromagnetic energy that moves a compass needle. • SQUIDs have been used for a variety of testing purposes that demand extreme sensitivity, including engineering, medical, and geological equipment. • Because they measure changes in a magnetic field with such sensitivity, they do not have to come in contact with a system that they are testing SQUID • Super current changes periodically with magnetic flux. • Junction region have much lower value than the rest of the superconducting ring. • When the current in the junction exceeds the critical value, the junction become normal, then the fluxons penetrate through the link. • So the current falls to critical value and then the link reverts to superconducting state. • Then the junction act as a gate. • It is prepared in such a way that it allows only single fluxons. SQUID HTSC • High-temperature superconductors are materials that behave as superconductors at unusually high temperatures. • Whereas "ordinary" or metallic superconductors usually have transition temperatures below 30 K (−243.2 °C), and must be cooled using liquid helium in order to achieve superconductivity. • HTS have been observed with transition temperatures as high as 138 K (−135 °C), and can be cooled to superconductivity using liquid nitrogen. • Eg: 1yttrium 2barium 3copper 7oxide, bismuth strontium calcium copper oxide • 1-2-3 super conductors: (no. atoms of metals 1:2:3) Applications of superconductors • medical magnetic resonance imaging biotechnical engineering • electronics SQUIDs transistors Josephson Junction devices circuitry connections particle accelerators sensors • Industrial separation magnets sensors and transducers magnetic shielding Power Generation Motors Transmission • Transportation: Magnetically levitated vehicles Marine propulsion