Abstract
The effects of 2.5-MeV electron irradiation on the magnetic properties of single crystals of the Remeika series superconductor Ca3Rh4Sn13 were studied using high-frequency ac susceptometry, magnetization, and electrical transport. This low-pinning cubic stannide is an ideal system to examine the effects of a controlled nonmagnetic pointlike disorder. The measured Campbell penetration depth was used to extract the magnetic field dependence of the unrelaxed critical current density, jc(H). The critical current is a monotonic function of a magnetic field in pristine state. However, even the lowest dose of electron irradiation causes a pronounced peak effect in jc(H). The peak effect is also observed in magnetization measurements performed with different characteristic time windows. We conclude that additional defects trigger the appearance of a disordered vortex phase at magnetic fields close to the upper critical field, and the peak effect is the result of a crossover from the weakly distorted low-field vortex lattice to the disordered high-field vortex phase. These results strongly support the static picture of the peak effect formation in Ca3Rh4Sn13 in which this is a feature of the critical current density, jc(H), and not the result of magnetic field-dependent vortex relaxation, j(H,t).
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 104521 |
| Journal | Physical Review B |
| Volume | 110 |
| Issue number | 10 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Sept 2024 |
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