Abstract

Suppression of the occurrence of remanent vortices is necessary to improve the quality factor of superconducting resonators. In particular, the flux-expulsion dynamics in Nb during cooling has become of major interest to researchers focusing on superconducting cavities. To study the vortex states and their behavior in high-purity cavity-grade Nb, we used a magneto-optical imaging technique to perform real-space observations of the magnetic field distributions during the field-cooling and field-scanning processes. In the field-cooling process, the distributions were observed to undergo phase separation into vortex and Meissner regions, as would be expected in an intermediate mixed state (IMS). The vortex regions in the IMS, such as vortex bundles, tend to be larger in higher fields, in contrast to the Meissner regions, which experience shrinkage. In the field-scanning process, domelike field profiles, which indicate a geometrical barrier with very weak bulk pinning, were observed. The existence of the IMS suggests that cavity-grade Nb is in a type-II/1 superconductor regime, in which attractive interaction between vortices at a length scale of the penetration depth is crucial for the behavior of vortices.

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