Abstract:
Bulk nanocomposites based on superconducting metals Pb and In embedded into matrices of natural chrysotile asbestos with the nanotube internal diameter $d\sim$ 6 nm have been fabricated and studied. The low-temperature electrical and magnetic properties of the nanocomposites demonstrate the superconducting transition with the transition critical temperature $T _c\approx$ (7.18 $\pm$ 0.02) K for the Pb–asbestos nanocomposite (this temperature is close to $T^{\operatorname{bulk}}_{c}$ = 7.196 K for bulk Pb). The electrical measurements show that In nanofilaments in asbestos have $T_c\sim$ 3.5–3.6 K that is higher than $T_{c\,{\operatorname{bulk}}}$ = 3.41 K for bulk In. It is shown that the temperature smearing of the superconducting transition in the temperature dependences of the resistance $R(T)\Delta T\approx$ 0.06 K for the Pb–asbestos and $\Delta T\approx$ 1.8 K for the In–asbestos are adequately described by the fluctuation Aslamazov–Larkin and Langer–Ambegaokar theories. The resistive measurements show that the critical magnetic fields of the nanofilaments extrapolated to $T$ = 0 K are $H_ c(0)\sim$ 47 kOe for Pb in asbestos and $H_c (0)\sim$ 1.5 kOe for In in asbestos; these values are significantly higher than the values for the bulk materials ($H_c^{\operatorname{bulk}}$ = 803 Oe for Pb and $H_c^{\operatorname{bulk}}$ = 285 Oe for In). The results of the electrical measurements for Pb–asbestos and In–asbestos agree with the data for the magnetic-field dependences of the magnetic moment in these nanocomposites.