Fluctuations, dissipation, and nonuniversal superfluid jumps in two-dimensional superconductors
Abstract
We report a comprehensive study of the complex AC conductivity of thin effectively 2D amorphous superconducting InOx films at zero applied field. Below a temperature scale Tc0 where the superconducting order parameter amplitude becomes well defined, there is a temperature where both the generalized superfluid stiffness acquires a frequency dependence and the DC mangetoresistance becomes linear in field. We associate this with a transition of the Kosterlitz-Thouless-Berezinskii (KTB) type. At our measurement frequencies the superfluid stiffness at TKTB is found to be larger than the universal value. Although this may be understood with a vortex dielectric constant of epsilonv ~ 1.9 within the usual KTB theory, this is a relatively large value and indicates that such a system may be out of the domain of applicability of the low-fugacity (low vortex density) KTB treatment. This opens up the possibility that at least some of the discrepancy from a non-universal magnitude is intrinsic. Our finite frequency measurements allow us access to a number of other phenomena concerning the charge dynamics in superconducting thin films, including an enhanced conductivity near the amplitude fluctuation temperature Tc0 and a finite dissipation at low temperature which appears to be a universal aspect of highly disordered superconducting films.
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