الفهرس | Only 14 pages are availabe for public view |
Abstract Although the pairing mechanism in MgB2 is thought to be phonon mediated, there are still many experimental results that lack appropriate explanation. For example, there is no consensus about the magnitude of the energy gap, its temperature dependence, and whether it has only one-gap or not. Many techniques have been used to investigate this, like Raman spectroscopy, farinfrared transmission, specific heat, high-resolution photoemission and tunneling. Most tunneling data on MgB2 are obtained from mechanical junctions. Measurements of energy gap by these junctions have many disadvantages like the instability to temperature and field changes. On the other hand, sandwich-like planar junctions offer a stable and reliable measurement for temperature dependence of the energy gap, where any variation in the tunneling spectra can be interpreted as a direct result from the sample under study. To the best of our knowledge, we report the first energy gap temperatureand magnetic field-dependence of MgB2/Pb planar junctions. Study of the temperature-dependence shows that the small gap value (reported by many groups and explained as a result of surface degradation) is a real bulk property of MgB2. Moreover, our data is in favor of the two-gap model rather than the onegap, multi-gap, or single anisotropic gap models. The study of magnetic field effect on the junctions gave an estimation of the upper critical field of about 5.6 T. The dependence of energy gap on the field has been studied as well. Our junctions show stability against temperature changes, but ”collapsed” when the magnetic field (applied normal to the junction barrier) is higher than 3.2 T. The irreversible structural change switched the tunnling mechanism from quisiparticle tunneling into Josephson tunneling. Josephson I-V curves at different temperatures have been studied and the characteristic voltages |