Determination of T c , vortex creation and vortex imaging of a superconducting Nb film using low-temperature magnetic force microscopy A honeycomb array of submicrometer holes in a Nb superconducting thin film has been fabricated to investigate the flux pinning effect. It is found that the minima positions reveal two regimes characterized by the matching fields and the fractional ones. It is believed that the complex behavior may come from more than one vortex being captured per pinning site. Furthermore, the temperature dependence of the saturation number of vortices per pinning site together with vortex-vortex interaction gives the complex vortex configurations.
We have investigated the effect of interfacial diffusion on the magnetic properties of Au∕Fe51Pt49 bilayer thin films. The samples were prepared in two stages. First, an ordered Fe51Pt49 continuous thin film was sputtered on a quartz substrate. Then an aurum cap layer was deposited onto the Fe51Pt49 film at room temperature, followed by a postannealing at 300–800°C to promote the interfacial diffusion. A high coercivity of 23.5kOe was achieved in the isotropic polycrystalline FePt-based film. Transmission electron micrographs indicate that the bilayer sample exhibits Ll0 ordered FePt grains with a diameter of about 20nm, which were partially isolated by Au phase. We consider that the isolation of FePtLl0 grains and the grain refining effect can be two contributory factors for the enhanced coercivity.
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