Title :
Nonlinear microwave response of Nb3Sn films: a case study of granular superconductors
Author :
Hein, Matthias A. ; Perpeet, Markus ; Müller, Günter
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Wuppertal Univ., Germany
fDate :
3/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We have investigated the microwave magnetic field dependent surface resistance, Rs(Bs), of Nb3Sn films of different film thickness and on different substrates at 19 GHz. The film thickness controls the grain size of the polycrystalline films. It provides a tool to study the role of grain boundaries on the nonlinear microwave response of granular superconductors. We find a non-monotonic dependence of the onset field, Bon, of nonlinear surface resistance on film thickness, with a maximum of 25 mT at 1.2 μm. This behaviour reveals that magnetic losses at grain boundaries dominate in thin films, and microwave heating in thick films. The universal scaling behaviour of Bon with temperature, its dependence on the thermal conductivity of the substrate, and the good agreement between the quadratic field dependence of Rs and a weakly-coupled grain model indicate heating at grain boundaries as a possible mechanism. The correlation between the nonlinear microwave response and microstructure of the granular films indicates possible improvements and intrinsic limitations
Keywords :
electromagnetic wave propagation; grain boundaries; grain size; niobium alloys; superconducting thin films; surface conductivity; thermal conductivity; tin alloys; type II superconductors; 19 GHz; Nb3Sn; film thickness; grain boundaries; grain size; granular superconductors; magnetic losses; microstructure; microwave heating; nonlinear microwave response; polycrystalline films; quadratic field dependence; scaling behaviour; surface resistance; thermal conductivity; thin films; weakly-coupled grain model; Electromagnetic heating; Grain boundaries; Magnetic films; Microwave magnetics; Niobium; Substrates; Superconducting films; Surface resistance; Thermal conductivity; Tin;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on