Asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity

After introducing the basic phenomena, the simplest (free-boundary) model describing the change of phase of a superconducting material is formulated. In some situations the model is ill-posed, and it is shown that it can be regularised in a certain parameter regime (type-I superconductors) by the Gi...

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1. Verfasser: Chapman, S
Format: Conference item
Veröffentlicht: 2002
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author Chapman, S
author_facet Chapman, S
author_sort Chapman, S
collection OXFORD
description After introducing the basic phenomena, the simplest (free-boundary) model describing the change of phase of a superconducting material is formulated. In some situations the model is ill-posed, and it is shown that it can be regularised in a certain parameter regime (type-I superconductors) by the Ginzburg-Landau model. For other parameter regimes (type-II superconductors) the free-boundary model is not appropriate, and a bifurcation analysis indicates that the normally conducting (normal) region should comprise thin "flux tubes" (or vortices) rather than large domains. An asymptotic analysis determines the law of motion of these vortices, and they are then averaged to produce a vortex density model. Including vortex pinning by impurities in this model leads to the familiar Bean critical state model.
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spelling oxford-uuid:5dc3e5e5-c47d-4c0c-9892-9418b5b924de2022-03-26T17:36:20ZAsymptotic analysis of models of superconductivityConference itemhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794uuid:5dc3e5e5-c47d-4c0c-9892-9418b5b924deSymplectic Elements at Oxford2002Chapman, SAfter introducing the basic phenomena, the simplest (free-boundary) model describing the change of phase of a superconducting material is formulated. In some situations the model is ill-posed, and it is shown that it can be regularised in a certain parameter regime (type-I superconductors) by the Ginzburg-Landau model. For other parameter regimes (type-II superconductors) the free-boundary model is not appropriate, and a bifurcation analysis indicates that the normally conducting (normal) region should comprise thin "flux tubes" (or vortices) rather than large domains. An asymptotic analysis determines the law of motion of these vortices, and they are then averaged to produce a vortex density model. Including vortex pinning by impurities in this model leads to the familiar Bean critical state model.
spellingShingle Chapman, S
Asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity
title Asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity
title_full Asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity
title_fullStr Asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity
title_full_unstemmed Asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity
title_short Asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity
title_sort asymptotic analysis of models of superconductivity
work_keys_str_mv AT chapmans asymptoticanalysisofmodelsofsuperconductivity