Abstract

We have investigated the influence of oxygen content and disorder on the surface impedance of epitaxial YBa 2Cu 3O 7−δ (YBCO) films at 87 GHz. For this purpose, five films prepared by DC-sputtering on MgO substrates were annealed for 1 h at 500° C in different oxygen pressures between 80 and 1000 mbar. The degree of oxygen disorder was varied by a change of the cooling procedure or a subsequent annealing at 250° C. The absolute values as well as the slope of the resistivity in the normal conducting state and the penetration depth in the superconducting state are continuously increasing with δ. The transition temperatures change only slowly and a maximum in T c vs. δ occurs. As a main result, we observe a strong influence of δ on the surface resistance below 0.8 T c which first increases at the maximum of T c and then decreases for higher oxygen deficiencies. Oxygen disorder leads to a degradation of all measured quantities, but R s was found to be most affected. These observations can be explained in the context of a recent model by Kresin and Wolf which proposes two conductive subsystems and, as a result, a two-gap structure of YBCO. Charge transfer between the Cu-O planes and chains leads to an induced superconducting state in the chains. Oxygen content and order affect the value of the smaller energy gap of the chains, which in turn has a large impact on R s . However, T c changes only slowly, reflecting its main correlation to the large energy gap given by the planes.

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