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Guided and rectified motion of magnetic flux quanta are important effects governing the magneto-resistive response of nanostructured superconductors. While at low ac frequencies these effects are rather well understood, their manifestation at higher ac frequencies remains poorly investigated. Here, we explore the upper frequency limits for guided and rectified net motion of superconducting vortices in epitaxial Nb films decorated with ferromagnetic nanostripes. By combining broadband electrical spectroscopy with resistance measurements we reveal that the rectified voltage vanishes at a geometrically defined frequency of about 700 MHz. By contrast, vortex guiding-related low-ac-loss response persists up to about 2 GHz. This value corresponds to the depinning frequency $f_mathrm{d}^mathrm{s}$ associated with the washboard pinning potential induced by the nanostripes and exhibiting peaks for the commensurate vortex lattice configurations. Applying a sum of dc and microwave ac currents at an angle $alpha$ with respect to the nanostripes, the angle dependence of $f_mathrm{d}^mathrm{s}(alpha)$ has been found to correlate with the angle dependence of the depinning current. In all, our findings suggest that superconductors with higher $f_mathrm{d}^mathrm{s}$ should be favored for an efficient vortex manipulation in the GHz ac frequency range.
We investigated experimentally the frequency dependence of a superconducting vortex ratchet effect by means of electrical transport measurements and modeled it theoretically using the time dependent Ginzburg-Landau formalism. We demonstrate that the
We study the dynamics of vortices in an asymmetric ring channel driven by an external current I in a Corbino setup. The asymmetric potential can rectify the motion of vortices and cause a net flow without any unbiased external drive, which is called
We experimentally demonstrate that the origin of multiply reversed rectified vortex motion in an asymmetric pinning landscape is a consequence not only of the vortex-vortex interactions but also essentially depends on the ratio between the characteri
We study the ratchet effect in a narrow pinning-free superconductive ring based on time-dependent Ginzburg-Landau (TDGL) equations. Voltage responses to external dc an ac currents at various magnetic fields are studied. Due to asymmetric barriers for
Recent studies have shown a number of surprising vortex dynamics phenomena both in low and high temperature superconductors, which include: low frequency noise, slow voltage oscillations, history dependent dynamic response, memory of the direction, a