Effects of interstitial oxygen on the superconductivity of niobium
Аннотация
Superconductivity in niobium-oxygen body-centered-cubic solid-solution alloys (oxygen content 0.024-3.50 at.%) was studied by calorimetric, magnetic, and resistive measurement techniques. These measurements included low-temperature-specific-heat capacity, superconducting-normal transition temperature ${T}_{c}$, direct-current magnetization, and electrical resistivity, as well as x-ray lattice parameter, microhardness, and optical metallography to characterize the samples. Oxygen in solid solution lowers the ${T}_{c}$ of niobium. In contrast to the prediction of DeSorbo, we found that $\ensuremath{\gamma}$, the electronic coefficient of low-temperature-specific-heat capacity, also decreases with oxygen concentration. Our data indicated that the "band-structure" electronic density of states at the Fermi level ${N}_{\mathrm{bs}}(0)$ and the electron-phonon coupling constant $\ensuremath{\lambda}$ both decrease with oxygen content. Therefore, both the density of electronic states and the phonon spectrum may be controlling the magnitude of ${T}_{c}$ in the niobium-oxygen system. Additional superconducting parameters were calculated for the niobium-oxygen alloys from our calorimetric, magnetic, and resistive data. The Ginzburg-Landau parameter ${\ensuremath{\kappa}}_{\mathrm{GL}}$ was found to increase from less than 1.0 for essentially pure Nb to about 10 for the Nb-3.5-at.%-O alloy. Calculated values of ${H}_{c2}(4.2 \mathrm{K})$ versus atomic-percent oxygen exhibit a maximum at 2-at.% oxygen which was observed experimentally.
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