Publication | Closed Access
Theory of melted flux liquids
624
Citations
31
References
1989
Year
Quantum LiquidRarefied FlowFlux LiquidsEngineeringPhysicsStatistical Field TheoryFluid MechanicsApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsFlux CrystalTransport PhenomenaShear ModulusThermodynamicsMultiphase FlowSimple LiquidCondensed Matter TheoryCritical PhenomenonSuperfluid Excitation Spectrum
Novel intermediate flux states should be accessible in high-${T}_{c}$ superconductors, where it appears that the conventional Abrikosov flux lattice is melted over a significant portion of the (H,T) plane. We discuss the Lindemann criterion, and argue that fluctuations in a flux crystal are highly anisotropic, so that an asymptotically two-dimensional melting transition is possible as the shear modulus drops toward zero for many sample geometries and field orientations. We then describe the ``entangled flux liquid'' which arises at high-flux densities or thick samples. The statistical mechanics of this liquid is closely related to the physics of two-dimensional superfluids. The decay of vortex line correlations along the field direction is controlled by the superfluid excitation spectrum. A renormalization-group analysis shows how line wandering changes the nature of the B(H) constitutive relation near ${H}_{c1}$. We suggest that a heavily entangled flux liquid could exhibit a shear modulus on experimental time scales, in analogy with viscoelastic behavior in dense polymer melts.
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