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Persistent current

In physics, persistent current refers to a perpetual electric current, not requiring an external power source. Such a current is impossible in normal electrical devices, since all commonly-used conductors have a non-zero resistance, and this resistance would rapidly dissipate any such current as heat. However, in superconductors and some mesoscopic devices, persistent currents are possible and observed due to quantum effects. In resistive materials, persistent currents can appear in microscopic samples due to size effects. Persistent currents are widely used in the form of superconducting magnets.

In magnetized objects

In electromagnetism, all magnetizations can be seen as microscopic persistent currents. By definition a magnetization   can be replaced by its corresponding microscopic form, which is an electric current density:

 .

This current is a bound current, not having any charge accumulation associated with it since it is divergenceless. What this means is that any permanently magnetized object, for example a piece of lodestone, can be considered to have persistent electric currents running throughout it (the persistent currents are generally concentrated near the surface).

The converse is also true: any persistent electric current is divergence-free, and can therefore be represented instead by a magnetization. Therefore, in the macroscopic Maxwell's equations, it is purely a choice of mathematical convenience, whether to represent persistent currents as magnetization or vice versa. In the microscopic formulation of Maxwell's equations, however,   does not appear and so any magnetizations must be instead represented by bound currents.

In superconductors

In superconductors, charge can flow without any resistance. It is possible to make pieces of superconductor with a large built-in persistent current, either by creating the superconducting state (cooling the material) while charge is flowing through it, or by changing the magnetic field around the superconductor after creating the superconducting state.[1] This principle is used in superconducting electromagnets to generate sustained high magnetic fields that only require a small amount of power to maintain. The persistent current was first identified by H. Kamerlingh Onnes, and attempts to set a lower bound on their duration have reached values of over 100,000 years.[2]

In resistive conductors

 
Persistent current schematic. The green arrow indicates the direction of static applied magnetic field B which allows a net current I (blue arrow) to flow and create a magnetization M (black arrow) by breaking the symmetry between clockwise and counterclockwise currents. The yellow dot represents an electron traversing the disordered material of the ring (green stars) without dissipation. A typical ring current is 1 nanoampere for a ring diameter of 0.6 micrometer at a temperature below 0.5 kelvin.[3]

Surprisingly, it is also possible to have tiny persistent currents inside resistive metals that are placed in a magnetic field, even in metals that are nominally "non-magnetic".[4] The current is the result of a quantum mechanical effect that influences how electrons travel through metals, and arises from the same kind of motion that allows the electrons inside an atom to orbit the nucleus forever.

This type of persistent current is a mesoscopic low temperature effect: the magnitude of the current becomes appreciable when the size of the metallic system is reduced to the scale of the electron quantum phase coherence length and the thermal length. Persistent currents decrease with increasing temperature and will vanish exponentially above a temperature known as the Thouless temperature. This temperature scales as the inverse of the circuit diameter squared.[3] Consequently, it has been suggested that persistent currents could flow up to room temperature and above in nanometric metal structures such as metal (Au, Ag,...) nanoparticles. This hypothesis has been offered for explaining the singular magnetic properties of nanoparticles made of gold and other metals.[5] Unlike with superconductors, these persistent currents do not appear at zero magnetic field, as the current fluctuates symmetrically between positive and negative values; the magnetic field breaks that symmetry and allows a nonzero average current. Although the persistent current in an individual ring is largely unpredictable due to uncontrolled factors like the disorder configuration, it has a slight bias so that an average persistent current appears even for an ensemble of conductors with different disorder configurations.[6]

This kind of persistent current was first predicted to be experimentally observable in micrometer-scale rings in 1983 by Markus Büttiker, Yoseph Imry, and Rolf Landauer.[7] Because the effect requires the phase coherence of electrons around the entire ring, the current can not be observed when the ring is interrupted by an ammeter and thus the current must by measured indirectly through its magnetization. In fact, all metals exhibit some magnetization in magnetic fields due a combination of de Haas–van Alphen effect, core diamagnetism, Landau diamagnetism, Pauli paramagnetism, which all appear regardless of the shape of the metal. The additional magnetization from persistent current becomes strong with a connected ring shape, and for example would disappear if the ring were cut.[6]

Experimental evidence of the observation of persistent currents were first reported in 1990 by a research group at Bell Laboratories using a superconducting resonator to study an array of copper rings.[8] Subsequent measurements using superconducting resonators and extremely sensitive magnetometers known as superconducting quantum interference devices (SQUIDs) produced inconsistent results.[9] In 2009, physicists at Stanford University using a scanning SQUID[10] and at Yale University using microelectromechanical cantilevers[3] reported measurements of persistent currents in nanoscale gold and aluminum rings respectively that both showed a strong agreement with the simple theory for non-interacting electrons.

"These are ordinary, non-superconducting metal rings, which we typically think of as resistors, yet these currents will flow forever, even in the absence of an applied voltage."

— Jack Harris, Associate Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Yale.

The 2009 measurements both reported greater sensitivity to persistent currents than previous measurements and made several other improvements to persistent current detection. The scanning SQUID's ability to change the position of the SQUID detector relative to the ring sample allowed for a number of rings to be measured on one sample chip and better extraction of the current signal from background noise. The cantilever detector's mechanical detection technique made it possible to measure the rings in a clean electromagnetic environment over a large range of magnetic field and also to measure a number of rings on one sample chip.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ Yen, F.; Chen, X.; Wang, R. B.; Zhu, J. M.; Li, J.; Ma, G. T. (2013). "Induced Currents in Closed-Ended Type-II Superconducting Coils". IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond. 23 (6): 8202005. Bibcode:2013ITAS...23...86Y. doi:10.1109/TASC.2013.2273534. S2CID 34374691.
  2. ^ File J, Mills, R Physical Review Letters 1963
  3. ^ a b c Bleszynski-Jayich, A. C.; Shanks, W. E.; Peaudecerf, B.; Ginossar, E.; von Oppen, F.; Glazman, L.; Harris, J. G. E. (2009). "Persistent Currents in Normal Metal Rings" (PDF). Science. 326 (5950): 272–5. arXiv:0906.4780v1. Bibcode:2009Sci...326..272B. doi:10.1126/science.1178139. PMID 19815772. S2CID 37548342.
  4. ^ "Measuring elusive "persistent current" that flows forever". R&D Daily. October 12, 2009.
  5. ^ Gréget, Romain (2012). "Magnetic Properties of Gold Nanoparticles: A Room-Temperature Quantum Effect". ChemPhysChem. 13 (13): 3092–3097. doi:10.1002/cphc.201200394. PMID 22753262. S2CID 28725119.
  6. ^ a b Akkermans, Eric; Montambaux, Gilles (2007). Mesoscopic Physics of Electrons and Photons. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85512-9.
  7. ^ Büttiker, M.; Imry, Y.; Landauer, R. (1983). "Josephson behavior in small normal one-dimensional rings". Phys. Lett. A. 96 (7): 365. Bibcode:1983PhLA...96..365B. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.205.7310. doi:10.1016/0375-9601(83)90011-7.
  8. ^ Lévy, L. P.; Dolan, G.; Dunsmuir, J.; Bouchiat, H. (1990). "Magnetization of mesoscopic copper rings: Evidence for persistent currents". Phys. Rev. Lett. 64 (17): 2074–2077. Bibcode:1990PhRvL..64.2074L. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.64.2074. PMID 10041570.
  9. ^ "Physicists Measure Elusive 'Persistent Current' That Flows Forever". ScienceDaily. October 12, 2009.
  10. ^ Bluhm, H.; Koshnick, N.; Bert, J.; Huber, M.; Moler, K. (2009). "Persistent Currents in Normal Metal Rings". Phys. Rev. Lett. 102 (13): 136802. arXiv:0810.4384. Bibcode:2009PhRvL.102m6802B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.102.136802. PMID 19392385. S2CID 16760003.
  11. ^ Birge, Norman O. (2009). "Sensing a Small But Persistent Current". Science. 326 (5950): 244–5. Bibcode:2009Sci...326..244B. doi:10.1126/science.1180577. PMID 19815766. S2CID 9674177.

persistent, current, physics, persistent, current, refers, perpetual, electric, current, requiring, external, power, source, such, current, impossible, normal, electrical, devices, since, commonly, used, conductors, have, zero, resistance, this, resistance, wo. In physics persistent current refers to a perpetual electric current not requiring an external power source Such a current is impossible in normal electrical devices since all commonly used conductors have a non zero resistance and this resistance would rapidly dissipate any such current as heat However in superconductors and some mesoscopic devices persistent currents are possible and observed due to quantum effects In resistive materials persistent currents can appear in microscopic samples due to size effects Persistent currents are widely used in the form of superconducting magnets Contents 1 In magnetized objects 2 In superconductors 3 In resistive conductors 4 See also 5 ReferencesIn magnetized objects EditIn electromagnetism all magnetizations can be seen as microscopic persistent currents By definition a magnetization M displaystyle mathbf M can be replaced by its corresponding microscopic form which is an electric current density J M displaystyle mathbf J nabla times mathbf M This current is a bound current not having any charge accumulation associated with it since it is divergenceless What this means is that any permanently magnetized object for example a piece of lodestone can be considered to have persistent electric currents running throughout it the persistent currents are generally concentrated near the surface The converse is also true any persistent electric current is divergence free and can therefore be represented instead by a magnetization Therefore in the macroscopic Maxwell s equations it is purely a choice of mathematical convenience whether to represent persistent currents as magnetization or vice versa In the microscopic formulation of Maxwell s equations however M displaystyle mathbf M does not appear and so any magnetizations must be instead represented by bound currents In superconductors EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2013 In superconductors charge can flow without any resistance It is possible to make pieces of superconductor with a large built in persistent current either by creating the superconducting state cooling the material while charge is flowing through it or by changing the magnetic field around the superconductor after creating the superconducting state 1 This principle is used in superconducting electromagnets to generate sustained high magnetic fields that only require a small amount of power to maintain The persistent current was first identified by H Kamerlingh Onnes and attempts to set a lower bound on their duration have reached values of over 100 000 years 2 In resistive conductors Edit Persistent current schematic The green arrow indicates the direction of static applied magnetic field B which allows a net current I blue arrow to flow and create a magnetization M black arrow by breaking the symmetry between clockwise and counterclockwise currents The yellow dot represents an electron traversing the disordered material of the ring green stars without dissipation A typical ring current is 1 nanoampere for a ring diameter of 0 6 micrometer at a temperature below 0 5 kelvin 3 Surprisingly it is also possible to have tiny persistent currents inside resistive metals that are placed in a magnetic field even in metals that are nominally non magnetic 4 The current is the result of a quantum mechanical effect that influences how electrons travel through metals and arises from the same kind of motion that allows the electrons inside an atom to orbit the nucleus forever This type of persistent current is a mesoscopic low temperature effect the magnitude of the current becomes appreciable when the size of the metallic system is reduced to the scale of the electron quantum phase coherence length and the thermal length Persistent currents decrease with increasing temperature and will vanish exponentially above a temperature known as the Thouless temperature This temperature scales as the inverse of the circuit diameter squared 3 Consequently it has been suggested that persistent currents could flow up to room temperature and above in nanometric metal structures such as metal Au Ag nanoparticles This hypothesis has been offered for explaining the singular magnetic properties of nanoparticles made of gold and other metals 5 Unlike with superconductors these persistent currents do not appear at zero magnetic field as the current fluctuates symmetrically between positive and negative values the magnetic field breaks that symmetry and allows a nonzero average current Although the persistent current in an individual ring is largely unpredictable due to uncontrolled factors like the disorder configuration it has a slight bias so that an average persistent current appears even for an ensemble of conductors with different disorder configurations 6 This kind of persistent current was first predicted to be experimentally observable in micrometer scale rings in 1983 by Markus Buttiker Yoseph Imry and Rolf Landauer 7 Because the effect requires the phase coherence of electrons around the entire ring the current can not be observed when the ring is interrupted by an ammeter and thus the current must by measured indirectly through its magnetization In fact all metals exhibit some magnetization in magnetic fields due a combination of de Haas van Alphen effect core diamagnetism Landau diamagnetism Pauli paramagnetism which all appear regardless of the shape of the metal The additional magnetization from persistent current becomes strong with a connected ring shape and for example would disappear if the ring were cut 6 Experimental evidence of the observation of persistent currents were first reported in 1990 by a research group at Bell Laboratories using a superconducting resonator to study an array of copper rings 8 Subsequent measurements using superconducting resonators and extremely sensitive magnetometers known as superconducting quantum interference devices SQUIDs produced inconsistent results 9 In 2009 physicists at Stanford University using a scanning SQUID 10 and at Yale University using microelectromechanical cantilevers 3 reported measurements of persistent currents in nanoscale gold and aluminum rings respectively that both showed a strong agreement with the simple theory for non interacting electrons These are ordinary non superconducting metal rings which we typically think of as resistors yet these currents will flow forever even in the absence of an applied voltage Jack Harris Associate Professor of Physics and Applied Physics at Yale The 2009 measurements both reported greater sensitivity to persistent currents than previous measurements and made several other improvements to persistent current detection The scanning SQUID s ability to change the position of the SQUID detector relative to the ring sample allowed for a number of rings to be measured on one sample chip and better extraction of the current signal from background noise The cantilever detector s mechanical detection technique made it possible to measure the rings in a clean electromagnetic environment over a large range of magnetic field and also to measure a number of rings on one sample chip 11 See also EditAharonov Bohm effect Electromagnetic quantum mechanical effect in regions of zero magnetic and electric field Byers Yang theorem Mesoscopic physics Subdiscipline of condensed matter physics that deals with materials of an intermediate size Perpetual motion Work being continuously done without an external input of energyReferences Edit Yen F Chen X Wang R B Zhu J M Li J Ma G T 2013 Induced Currents in Closed Ended Type II Superconducting Coils IEEE Trans Appl Supercond 23 6 8202005 Bibcode 2013ITAS 23 86Y doi 10 1109 TASC 2013 2273534 S2CID 34374691 File J Mills R Physical Review Letters 1963 a b c Bleszynski Jayich A C Shanks W E Peaudecerf B Ginossar E von Oppen F Glazman L Harris J G E 2009 Persistent Currents in Normal Metal Rings PDF Science 326 5950 272 5 arXiv 0906 4780v1 Bibcode 2009Sci 326 272B doi 10 1126 science 1178139 PMID 19815772 S2CID 37548342 Measuring elusive persistent current that flows forever R amp D Daily October 12 2009 Greget Romain 2012 Magnetic Properties of Gold Nanoparticles A Room Temperature Quantum Effect ChemPhysChem 13 13 3092 3097 doi 10 1002 cphc 201200394 PMID 22753262 S2CID 28725119 a b Akkermans Eric Montambaux Gilles 2007 Mesoscopic Physics of Electrons and Photons Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85512 9 Buttiker M Imry Y Landauer R 1983 Josephson behavior in small normal one dimensional rings Phys Lett A 96 7 365 Bibcode 1983PhLA 96 365B CiteSeerX 10 1 1 205 7310 doi 10 1016 0375 9601 83 90011 7 Levy L P Dolan G Dunsmuir J Bouchiat H 1990 Magnetization of mesoscopic copper rings Evidence for persistent currents Phys Rev Lett 64 17 2074 2077 Bibcode 1990PhRvL 64 2074L doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 64 2074 PMID 10041570 Physicists Measure Elusive Persistent Current That Flows Forever ScienceDaily October 12 2009 Bluhm H Koshnick N Bert J Huber M Moler K 2009 Persistent Currents in Normal Metal Rings Phys Rev Lett 102 13 136802 arXiv 0810 4384 Bibcode 2009PhRvL 102m6802B doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 102 136802 PMID 19392385 S2CID 16760003 Birge Norman O 2009 Sensing a Small But Persistent Current Science 326 5950 244 5 Bibcode 2009Sci 326 244B doi 10 1126 science 1180577 PMID 19815766 S2CID 9674177 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Persistent current amp oldid 1170321696, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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