Pressure Effect on Superconducting Lead

Abstract
Techniques are described for measuring the effect of hydrostatic pressure on the critical field, Hc, of superconducting Pb. Pressures up to 650 atm were applied using solid helium as the pressure fluid. Observations were made from about 7 to 1°K, and values of dH0dP, dTcdP, and the temperature variation of (HcdP)T are reported. From these data the value of (1γ*)(dγ*dP) is deduced, where γ* is the temperature coefficient per unit volume of the normal electronic specific heat. The observed data are accurately represented over the full range of measurement by the equation Hc(P, T)=H0(P)f(t) where t=TTc and f(t) is independent of pressure. The "similarity principle" requirement, H0(P)Tc(P)=const, is shown to be invalid for Pb. The results provide the basis for a discussion of the pressure effects on the net interaction potential, V, of the Bardeen, Cooper, Schrieffer theory and the density of electronic states near the Fermi surface.

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