Impact of long-range interactions on the disordered vortex lattice
arXiv:cond-mat/0302225 · doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.68.014515
Abstract
The interaction between the vortex lines in a type-II superconductor is mediated by currents. In the absence of transverse screening this interaction is long-ranged, stiffening up the vortex lattice as expressed by the dispersive elastic moduli. The effect of disorder is strongly reduced, resulting in a mean-squared displacement correlator <u^2(R,L)> = <[u(R,L)-u(0,0)]^2> characterized by a mere logarithmic growth with distance. Finite screening cuts the interaction on the scale of the London penetration depth λand limits the above behavior to distances R<λ. Using a functional renormalization group (RG) approach, we derive the flow equation for the disorder correlation function and calculate the disorder-averaged mean-squared relative displacement <u^2(R)> \propto ln^{2Ï} (R/a_0). The logarithmic growth (2Ï=1) in the perturbative regime at small distances [A.I. Larkin and Yu.N. Ovchinnikov, J. Low Temp. Phys. 34, 409 (1979)] crosses over to a sub-logarithmic growth with 2Ï=0.348 at large distances.
9 pages, no figures