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Spin Meissner effect in superconductors and the origin of the Meissner effect J.E. Hirsch, UCSD Hvar, 2008 Why the Meissner effect is not understood, and how it can be understood Spin Meissner effect: spontaneous spin current in the ground state of superconductors Charge expulsion, charge inhomogeneity in superconducting state Electrodynamic (London-like) equations for charge and spin Experiments 3 key pieces of the physics that BCS theory got right: * Cooper pairs * Energy gap * Macroscopic quantum coherence * Electron-phonon-induced attraction between electrons (1) Key role of electron-hole asymmetry (2) Key role of kinetic energy lowering as driving force (3) Macroscopic charge inhomogeneity and internal E-field (4) Key role of spin-orbit interaction (5) Key role of mesoscopic orbits (6) Spontaneous currents in the absence of applied fields 3 key pieces of the physics that BCS theory got right: * Cooper pairs * Energy gap 1988-2008 * Macroscopic quantum coherence http://physics.ucsd.edu/~jorge/hole.html * Electron-phonon-induced attraction between electrons Meissner effect: expulsion of magnetic field from interior of superconductor cool 1933 The expulsion of magnetic flux from the interior of a superconducting metal when it is cooled in a magnetic field to below the critical temperature, near absolute zero, at which the transition to superconductivity takes place. It was discovered by Walther Meissner in 1933, when he measured the magnetic field surrounding two adjacent long cylindrical single crystals of tin and observed that at ?452.97°F (3.72 K) the Earth's magnetic field was expelled from their interior. This indicated that at the onset of superconductivity they became perfect diamagnets. This discovery showed that the transition to superconductivity is reversible, and that the laws of thermodynamics apply to it. The Meissner effect forms one of the cornerstones in the understanding of superconductivity, and its led F. London and H. London to develop their phenomenological electrodynamics of superconductivity. The magnetic field is actually not completely expelled, but penetrates a very thin surface layer where currents flow, screening the interior from the magnetic field. lL=London penetration depth two pathways to Meissner current cool B normal super apply B super I normal EFaraday cool apply B expel B I cool I same final state Faraday electric field points in opposite directions Meissner current I points in the same direction Why the Meissner effect is a puzzle Lower the temperature... or lower slightly the applied H... B EFarad I Meissner state B=0 Current develops 'spontaneously' upon cooling or lowering H opposing EFarad What is the 'force'pushing the electrons near the surface to start moving all in the same direction, opposite to eEFarad ? How is angular momentum conserved??? r=2lL orbits! The key to the Meissner effect B I cylinder lL R vs Angular momentum in Meissner current: mev sR =angular momentum of 1 el mevs (2lL ) bulk 2RlL hns =# of electrons in surface layer R 2 hn s (h=cylinder height, ns=superfluid density) some very complicated math. . . . . 2lL Le (2RlL hns ) (mevsR) (R hn s ) (mev s (2lL )) 2 Some simple relations: Normal state: Superconducting state: Density of states at the Fermi energy: London penetration depth: 4 n se 2 lL mec 2 1 3n 3nme g(F ) 2 2 2F kF Magnetic susceptibility: Magnetic susceptibility: 1 2 Landau B g(F ) 3 1 London 4 1 n se 2 mec 2 4 2 2 4 me c 4 n se 1 e 2 3nme ( )( 2 2) 3 2mec kF ne 2 1 2 (k F ) 2 4me c 2 2 n se 2 (2 l ) L 2 4mec Larmor diamagnetism B v Apply magnetic field B: r 2 ner v Larmor n B 4me c 2 1 B 2 1 E dl c t B da 2rE c t r dv er B er me eE v B dt 2c t 2mec Orbital magnetic moment: e e er er er er e 2r 2 B B l mevr v v 2 2c 2c 2mec 4me c 2mec 2mec 2c magnetic susceptibility per unit volume: n=electrons/unit vol ne 2 ne 2 2 n se 2 1 2 2 Larmor n (2 l ) (k ) 2 r or L F 2 2 B 4me c 4mec 4me c How the transition occurs n se 2 2 Larmor r 2 4mec B r Superconducting state: 2 Normal state: n se 1 1 2 2 n se 2 1 2 (2 l ) Landau B g(F ) (kF ) London L 2 2 4mec 4 4mec 3 orbit expansion: -1 r=k F orbits 2lL kF-1 r=2lL orbits two pathways to Meissner current apply B super expel B normal EFaraday I cool I same final state The two pathways to the Meissner current Apply magnetic field B: Expand electron orbit in B: Faraday's law pushes eB v v E Lorentz force pushes eB v r 1 E dl c t B da dv er B me eE dt 2c t er v B 2mec elL v v B me c r F v e dv F v B Fr me c dt d e e d 2 (r v ) (r v )B (r )B dt 2mec 2mec dt r=2lL er v B 2mec BCS: p 0 v 1 ( p e A) A lL B m c Why is there macroscopic phase coherence in superconductors? r=kF-1 orbits Normal state Non-overlapping orbits Relative phase doesn't matter r=2lL orbits Superconducting state Highly overlapping orbits Phase coherence necessary to avoid collisions A little help from a friend... 2 m c 1 2 e l:L , ns 3 , 2 4 n se a0 a0 2 mee 2 ==> 2 me c 1 c 2 2 l:L a0 a 2 2 2 0 4e mee 4 e 2 2 137 A little help from a friend... The speed of light must enter into the superconducting wave function! mc 1 l2:L 2 e 4 n se , ns 2 a03 , a0 2 mee 2 ==> 2 me c 1 c 2 2 l:L a0 a 2 2 2 0 4e mee 4 e 2 2 137 So we learn from the Meissner effect that: transition to superconductivity = expansion of electronic orbit from r=kF-1 to r=2lL What happens when there is no magnetic field? Spin-orbit force deflects electron in expanding orbit! Spin orbit scattering (Goldberger&Watson) spin-orbit spin-orbit scattering center scattering center v v p c p v a moving magnetic moment is equivalent to an electric dipole So we learn from the Meissner effect that: transition to superconductivity = expansion of electronic orbit from r=kF-1 to r=2lL What happens when there is no magnetic field? Spin-orbit force deflects electron in expanding orbit! p v v E p c dL p E dt d v 1 me (r v ) ( ) E (E v ) dt c c v d d 2 with E r : me (r v ) (r v ) = (r ) dt c 2c dt v E 2 Er B r v (r ) v 2mec 2c 2c E v B 2mec E 2r, What's E? =| e | ns r 8me l 2 L E v 2en sr ensr e v B 2mec mec 2mec v v 4 n se 2 1 ; with 2 2 mec lL For r=2lL v ==> L = me v r . . . . 2 4me lL !!!!!!!! The two pathways to the Spin Meissner current 'Apply' electric field E: Maxwell's law pushes E(t) B v v r 1 E B c t Expand electron orbit in E: Lorentz torque pushes v r v v p E ( ) (2 | e | nsr ) c dv 1 me ( B) ( B) dL m d (r v ) e r (v B ) e eff dt 2 dt dt c 1 ( E ) Beff 2n s 2c t er nseB 1 n e v | E | s B r v Beff r 2mec 2mec mec mec r=2lL 2 2n seB n e v v lL 2 s 2 lL ==> L = mev r mec me c 4me lL 2 Ground state of a superconductor r=2lL orbits r=2lL orbits spin down electrons spin up electrons Currents in the interior cancel out, near the surface survive ==> there is a spontaneous spin current in the ground state of superconductors! There is a spontaneous spin current in the ground state of superconductors, flowing within lL of the surface (JEH, EPL81, 67003 (2008)) v 0 4mel L nˆ no external fields applied For lL=400A, v072,395cm/s e 2mec v0 # of carriers in the spin current: ns When a magnetic field is applied: e v v 0 l L B nˆ mec B n v The slowed-down spin component stops when m ec c 0 B v 0 ~ Hc1 ! 2 2 el L 4el L 4l L 0 hc / 2 | e | Summary of argument: 4 n se 2 1) 2 lL mec 2 (Ampere, Faraday, Newton, London) 2) Orbits have radius 2lL 1 (to explain origin of Meissner current) e 3) Magnetic moment of electron is B 2mec 4) Background positive charge density is | e | ns = - superfluid dens. 1)+2)+3)+4) ==> L /2 1)+2)+3)+4) ==> magnetic field that stops the spin current is Hc1 Therefore: Superconductivity is an intrinsically relativistic effect Electron spin and associated magnetic moment plays a key role The wavefunction of a superconductor contains c=speed of light Back to: cooling a superconductor in the presence of a B-field: A clue from plasma physics What makes electrons move in the direction needed to create all these currents when T is lowered from above to below Tc? B Vortex state Meissner state B I I B I Intermediate state A clue from plasma physics www.mpia-hd.mpg.de/homes/fendt/Lehre/Lecture_OUT/lect_jets4.pdf But if there is charge flow, it will result in charge inhomogeneity and an electric field in the interior of superconductors. E 4 v Meissner state B Vortex state FB ve I e FB v B c B Intermediate state Electrons have to flow away from the interior of the superconductor, towards the surface and towards the normal regions! Le B I Le But if there is charge flow, it will result in charge inhomogeneity and an electric field in the interior of superconductors. E 4 Can there be an electric field inside superconductors? London says NO. First London equation (1934): J ne E t m J nev 2 free acceleration of electrons (n=density, v=speed, J=current) If E = 0, J increases to infinity, unless Newton’s law is violated? dv v v2 v ( v ) ! dt t 2 dv m eE dt 2 ne v ne v J (E ) E ne(v ( v ) ) ne m t m 2 t J can be zero even if E is non-zero! t 2 2 New electrodynamic equations for superconductors (JEH, PRB69, 214515 (2004) ne 2 c 1 4ne 2 1) J A A ; 2 2 mc 4lL lL mc 2 1 A J ne 2 A ne 2 J ne 2 Note: E (E ) , NOT E ==> t mc t m c t t m 1 0 ; 2) A c t (Lorenz gauge) J , continuity equation: J c 4l2L A 1 t 4l2L t ==> (r,t) 0 0 ==> t integrate in time, 1 integration constant 0 , ... 1 4l 2 L [ (r,t) 0 (r)] 0 (r) 0 d r' | r r'| 3 Electrodynamics 2 1 J 2 J 2 J 2 2 lL c t 2 1 B 2 B 2 B 2 2 lL c t 1 1 2 1 (E E 0 ) 2 (E E 0 ) 2 (E E 0 ) 2 lL c t 2 E 0 40 1 2 1 ( 0 ) 2 ( 0 ) 2 ( 0 ) 2 lL c t 2 1 Relativistic form: 2 (A A0 ) 1 l 2 L 2 1 2 2 2 c t 2 A (A(r,t),i(r,t)) A0 (0,i0 (r )) J (J (r,t),ic(r,t)) (A A0 ) or equivalently J J0 c (A A0 ) 2 4lL J0 (0,ic0 ) Electrostatics: ( (r) 0 (r)) 2 1 l 2 L ( (r) 0 (r)) 2 ((r) 0 ) ; (r) 4(r) 0 (r) 40 2 2 2 (r) 0 (E E 0 ) 2 1 l 2 L 1 l 2 L ((r) 0 ) (E E 0 ) outside supercond. +assume (r) are continuous and its normal derivative at surface Solution for sphere of radius R: R3 sinh( r / lL ) (r) = 0 (1 2 ) 3lL R / lL cosh( R / lL ) sinh( R / lL ) No electric field outside sphere lL Sample size dependence of expelled charge (Q) and E-field < 0 = charge density near surface 0 > 0 = charge density in interior sphere of radius R 0 Q ~ 0R3 ~ - R2 lL lL Electrostatic energy cost: UE ~ Q2/R ~ ( R2 lL)2/R ~ ()2 R3 ~ (0)2 R5 ~ Volume~R3 ==> independent of R, 0 ~ 1/R Electric field vs. r: Em 4lL independent of R E Em r R1 R2 How much charge is expelled? Emax R R element Tc(K) Hc(G) lL(A) Extra elec- Em trons/ion (Volts/cm) Al 1.14 105 500 1/17 mill 31,500 Sn 3.72 309 510 1/3.7 mill 92,700 Hg 4.15 412 410 1/2.5 mill 123,600 Pb 7.19 803 390 1/1 mill 240,900 Nb 9.50 1980 400 1/1.3 mill 308,400 Spin currents in superconductors (JEH, Phys. Rev. B 71, 184521 (2005)) Internal electric field (in the absence of applied B) pointing out k k c c E carries a spin current c k ck ck c k Jch arg e necessarily in the presence of internal E-field n (v v ) 0 no charge current ==> no B-field 2 n Jspin (v v ) 0 2 spin current without charge current! Flows within a London penetration depth of the surface Speed of spin current carriers: ~ 100,000 cm/s Number of spin current carriers: =superfluid density We now have 2 new pieces of physics of superconductors: r=2lL orbits charge expulsion v 0 4me lL L /2 0 lL 2lL 0 Em 4lL R spin current How are they related? How much charge is expelled? (JEH) v 0 ~ Hc1 4me lL ==> c 0 Em ~ Hc1 2 2 4elL 4lL c v 0 nse 3 16 e l c L J (r ) c 2lL 2 1 E n s ( me v2 0 ) m 2 8 (charge neutrality) Emax 0 R ( (r ) 0 ) J (r ) en sv (r ) Em 4lL v 0 4me lL v0 c 8lL (E (r ) E 0 (r )) 2 1 B 2 n ( m v ) (Recall s e s ) 2 8 n Spin current electrodynamics (4d formulation) Energetics v v v0 v 0 4me lL 1 pair 2 me (v0 )2 2 Apply a magnetic 1 1 0 0 2 v 2v , v 0, pair me (2v ) 4 me (v0 ) field: 2 ==> condensation energy per particle: 2 1 c me (v0 )2 2 energy lowering per particle in entering sc state: 2c = c 2c c + Coulomb energycost + condensation energy 2 1 E n s ( me v2 0 ) m 2 8 2 2 1 1 2 m ev 0 ns B ~ 1.5eV ~ condensation 2 2 4 2m e (2l L ) 2 energy of sc Type I vs type II materials x=distance between orbit centers Type I: x> 2lL Type II: x< 2lL Phase difference: e p mev A, c p i e me v dl B c e hc B B 0 c 2e h c hc 0 (2e) 2 e What drives superconductivity? 1) Excess negative charge (CuO2)=, (MgB2)-, (FeAs)2) Almost full bands (hole conduction in normal state) 3) Kinetic energy lowering (Kinetic energy is highest when band is almost full) kF-1 is small kF too many electrons! How is angular momentum conserved in the Meissner effect?? Electromagnetic field carries angular momentum! B Le =-Le But - is way too small to give enough Lfield Spin-orbit interaction transfers counter-L to ions! B JEH, J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 20 (2008) 235233 Lfield Lions Experimental tests? 1) Detect spin current * polarized light scattering (PRL100, 086603 (08) * inelastic polarized neutron scattering * photoemission * Detect electric fields produced by spin current v0 n * Insert a 'spin current rectifier' 2) Detect internal electric field * positrons, muons, neutrons 3) Response of superconductor to applied electric field (Tao effect) 4) Detect change in plasmon dispersion relation in sc state ..... IT IS A FALSIFIABLE THEORY! To prove this theory wrong, find clear experimental evidence for any of the following: * A superconductor that has no spontaneous spin current near the surface, with carrier density ns/2 and speed v /4me lL * A superconductor that has no outward-pointing electric field in its interior * A superconductor that expels magnetic fields without expelling negative charge * A superconductor that has no hole carriers in normal state * A high Tc superconductor with no excess negative charge anywhere * A superconductor with tunneling asymmetry of intrinsic origin that has opposite sign to the one usually observed * A superconductor with gap function that has no k dependence * A superconductor not driven by kinetic energy lowering