Specific-heat jump of superconducting lamellas with pair-breaking boundary conditions
- 1 July 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review B
- Vol. 14 (1) , 78-88
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevb.14.78
Abstract
Specific-heat measurements are reported for aluminum foils and tin films near their superconductive transition point. Surface pair-breaking effects were induced by three different means: the implantation of gadolinium impurities, the superimposition of the stray fields from iron deposits, and the proximity effect with chromium. The specific-heat jump reduction and the shift in the critical temperature are analyzed within the framework of Fulde and Moormann calculations on the thermodynamical properties of superconducting contacts. On the whole a fair agreement between experiment and theory is observed, but some limitations of the theoretical treatment and some difficulties in the experimental situation are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Superconductive density of states in Ag-Pb-Ag sandwiches from calorimetric measurementsSolid State Communications, 1973
- Comment on "Thermodynamic Properties of Small Superconducting Grains"Physical Review B, 1973
- Thin films heat capacity measurements in the 3He temperature rangePhysics Letters A, 1972
- Thermodynamics of the Proximity Effect: Specific-Heat Jumps in Lamellar Lead-Tin Eutectic AlloysPhysical Review B, 1972
- Steady-State, ac-Temperature CalorimetryPhysical Review B, 1968
- Proximity Effects between Superconducting and Magnetic FilmsPhysical Review B, 1966
- EFFECT OF TENSILE STRAIN ON SUPERCONDUCTING TRANSITION TEMPERATURE OF Al FILMSApplied Physics Letters, 1964
- Specific Heat Measurements and Proximity Effects in Tin-Lead Eutectic AlloysReviews of Modern Physics, 1964
- Specific Heat of Aluminum Near its Superconductive Transition PointZeitschrift für Naturforschung A, 1963
- Effect of Elastic Strain on the Superconducting Critical Temperature of Evaporated Tin FilmsJournal of Applied Physics, 1962