posted on 2013-11-05, 00:00authored byY. L. Wang, M. L. Latimer, Z. L. Xiao, R. Divan, L. E. Ocola, G. W. Crabtree, W. K. Kwok
The maximum current (critical current) a type-II superconductor can transmit without energy loss is limited by
the motion of the quantized magnetic flux penetrating into a superconductor. Introducing nanoscale holes into a
superconducting film has been long pursued as a promising way to increase the critical current. So far the critical
current enhancement was found to be mostly limited to low magnetic fields. Here we experimentally investigate
the critical currents of superconducting films with a conformal array of nanoscale holes that have nonuniform
density while preserving the local ordering.We find that the conformal array of nanoscale holes provides a more
significant critical current enhancement at high magnetic fields. The better performance can be attributed to its
arching effect that not only gives rise to the gradient in hole density for pinning vortices with a wide range of
densities but also prevents vortex channeling occurring in samples with a regular lattice of holes.
Funding
This work was supported by DOE BES under Contract No.
DE-AC02-06CH11357