Meissner Effect
Meissner Effect
Meissner Effect
state. When a material is called below a specified temperature at which the magnetic field
from the interior of the material is exploded, then this material is transformed into the
superconductor. This phenomenon is called the Meissner Effect.
The temperature required to convert the material into the superconductor is called the
transition temperature. This transition temperature is near absolute temperature (0 kelvin).
This superconductor material has zero electric resistance. The main importance of the
Meissner Effect is magnetic levitation, which is a process by which a body is suspended with
no support except a magnetic field.
Superconducting State
The superconducting state is the state where the material has zero electric resistance. At this
stage, the material loses all the resistance of the flow of electric current. When the material is
cooled below the transition temperature, it converts into the superconductor and reaches the
superconducting state. Mercury reaches the superconducting state when cooled down below
4.1 kelvin.
Meissner State
he state at which the material becomes a superconductor is called the Meissner state. When
the magnetic field increases further to the specified value, and the material behaves like the
ordinary conductor, the Meissner state is broken down. This specified magnetic field value is
known as the critical magnetic field.
The more the value of temperature below the transition temperature decreases, the more the
value of the critical magnetic field is increased. The Meissner state can only be broken down
when the magnitude of the electric field is too strong. On the basis of this breakdown, there
can be two types of superconductors that may form.
Type-I Superconductor: This superconductor excludes the magnetic field until the
superconductivity is destructed abruptly. Later, the magnetic field penetrates
completely—the critical value of the type-I superconductor too low.
Type-II Superconductor: The type two superconductors keeps out the entire magnetic
field until a lower critical value is reached. The magnetic flux quantum, which
penetrates the superconductor, is now appearing. In this zone, the metal is no longer
remain a superconductor. If the value of the field increases to a higher critical value,
then the metal stops being a superconductor. This type of superconductor is made
with material that has high electric resistivity.
Diamagnetism of superconductor
The superconductor has the magnetic susceptibility of -1 which makes it perfect
diamagnetism. This diamagnetic keeps magnetization which resists any applied magnetic
field, thus the superconductor feels repulsion by any magnetic field.
This repulsion force is the main reason for the levitation of a superconductor, under the
application of a magnet. If this magnetic field is separate or the temperature of the
superconductor rises above the transition temperature, the magnetization and surface currents
disappear, and the levitation will stop.
Contradiction of Meissner Effect
The Maxwell’s equation for electrodynamics is given by,
E=-dB/dt
The electric field is equal to zero for a superconductor.
0=-dB/dt
0=dB/dt
B=constant
According to Meissner, the magnetic field inside a superconductor is zero, but in this case the
magnetic field has constant value and is not equal to zero.