Abstract

The vortex-solid phase boundary of ${\mathrm{YBa}}_{2}$${\mathrm{Cu}}_{3}$${\mathrm{O}}_{7\mathrm{\ensuremath{-}}\mathrm{\ensuremath{\delta}}\mathrm{}}$ (YBCO) thin films was studied as a function of oxygen stoichiometry, \ensuremath{\delta}, using magnetotransport measurements. Experimental evidence for a characteristic crossover field, ${\mathrm{H}}_{0}$, separating two distinct types of behavior, was observed for films with \ensuremath{\delta}g0.12 to occur at a temperature, ${\mathrm{T}}_{0}$, that is about half of the superconducting transition temperature (${\mathrm{T}}_{0}$\ensuremath{\approx}${\mathrm{T}}_{\mathrm{c}}$/2). When plotted as ${\mathrm{H}}_{\mathrm{g}}$(T)/${\mathrm{H}}_{0}$ versus (1-T/${\mathrm{T}}_{\mathrm{c}}$), all of the boundaries collapse onto a single universal curve. An implication of this collapse is that an empirical equation which depends only on ${\mathrm{T}}_{\mathrm{c}}$, the anisotropy \ensuremath{\gamma}, and ${\mathrm{T}}_{0}$, ${\mathrm{H}}_{\mathrm{g}}$(T)=${\mathrm{H}}_{0}$[(1-T/${\mathrm{T}}_{\mathrm{c}}$)/(1-${\mathrm{T}}_{0}$/${\mathrm{T}}_{\mathrm{c}}$)${]}^{\mathrm{n}}$, where ${\mathrm{H}}_{0}$=[1.2${\mathrm{\ensuremath{\varphi}}}_{0}$/(s\ensuremath{\gamma}${)}^{2}$], can be used to describe the ${\mathrm{H}}_{\mathrm{g}}$(T) boundary for any YBCO thin film and other disordered YBCO materials. Estimates of the vortex-glass (VG) correlation length, ${\ensuremath{\xi}}_{\mathrm{VG}}$, are made. The value of ${\ensuremath{\xi}}_{\mathrm{VG}}$ at the point where VG scaling finally breaks down is found to be independent of magnetic field for the fully oxygenated films, however, it is dependent on field for deoxygenated films. This result suggests that the pinning in the fully oxygenated films is dominated by correlated disorder while pinning in the deoxygenated films becomes dominated by quenched disorder.

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