Spatially-resolved voltage-reversal due to Bernoulli potentials in dissipative Bi₂Sr₂CaCu₂O_(8+x)
Pith reviewed 2026-05-10 01:08 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Voltage along one edge of a Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x Hall bar reverses sign compared to the opposite edge above critical current in a magnetic field.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Above critical current in an applied magnetic field, we observe longitudinal differential voltage along one edge comparable in magnitude but opposite in sign to the other edge. This phenomenon is unaffected by reversal of the applied field, and seems unique to devices with invasive voltage contacts. We attribute the source of this behavior to particle-hole symmetry breaking in moving vortices and the formation of opposite Bernoulli potentials due to opposing vortex velocities at the edges where the invasive contacts create hotspots for rapid vortex nucleation and flux flow.
What carries the argument
Bernoulli potentials formed by opposing vortex velocities at the device edges, arising from particle-hole symmetry breaking in moving vortices.
If this is right
- Dissipative current flow in layered superconductors includes spatially varying electrostatic potentials linked to local vortex velocities.
- Invasive contacts modify vortex nucleation rates and therefore reshape the overall flux-flow pattern across the device width.
- The voltage reversal acts as a direct signature of particle-hole asymmetry effects inside individual vortices during flux flow.
- Transport data interpretation in these materials must account for contact geometry when currents exceed the critical value.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Device fabrication for vortex studies may require deliberate choice between invasive and non-invasive contacts to control or suppress this potential distribution.
- Similar spatially resolved voltage patterns could appear in other type-II superconductors if particle-hole asymmetry is present during flux motion.
- The mechanism suggests that local electrostatic fields from vortex flow might influence the onset of instability in high-current superconducting states.
Load-bearing premise
The edge-to-edge voltage reversal is produced by Bernoulli potentials from opposing vortex velocities rather than by contact-induced artifacts, thermoelectric effects, or measurement geometry.
What would settle it
Fabricating identical Hall bars with only non-invasive surface contacts and repeating the magneto-transport measurements to check whether the voltage reversal disappears would directly test the proposed mechanism.
read the original abstract
We measure magneto-transport and critical currents in Bi$_2$Sr$_2$CaCu$_2$O$_{8+x}$ Hall bar devices. Above critical current in an applied magnetic field, we observe longitudinal differential voltage along one edge comparable in magnitude but opposite in sign to the other edge. This phenomenon is unaffected by reversal of the applied field, and seems unique to devices with invasive voltage contacts. We attribute the source of this behavior to particle-hole symmetry breaking in moving vortices and the formation of opposite Bernoulli potentials due to opposing vortex velocities at the edges where the invasive contacts create hotspots for rapid vortex nucleation and flux flow. These results are fundamental to the composition and flow of dissipative currents in layered superconductors.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript reports magneto-transport and critical current measurements in Bi₂Sr₂CaCu₂O₈₊ₓ Hall bar devices. Above the critical current in an applied magnetic field, the authors observe a longitudinal differential voltage along one edge comparable in magnitude but opposite in sign to the voltage along the other edge. This reversal is unaffected by applied-field reversal and appears only in devices with invasive voltage contacts. The central claim attributes the effect to particle-hole symmetry breaking in moving vortices, producing opposite Bernoulli potentials at the edges due to opposing vortex velocities nucleated at contact-induced hotspots.
Significance. If the attribution to Bernoulli potentials holds after quantitative validation and exclusion of artifacts, the result would illuminate the composition of dissipative currents in layered superconductors and the role of local vortex dynamics at contacts. The use of spatially resolved edge voltages in Hall bars offers a potentially useful probe of non-equilibrium effects, but the current lack of magnitude estimates, thermometry, or alternative-exclusion controls reduces the immediate significance.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the attribution of the observed edge-to-edge voltage reversal to opposite Bernoulli potentials generated by opposing vortex velocities at invasive-contact hotspots is presented without a derivation, estimate of vortex velocity/density, or calculated potential magnitude. This leaves open whether the mechanism can account for the reported voltages or whether contact resistance, thermoelectric gradients, or geometry could produce an equivalent antisymmetric signal.
- [Abstract] Abstract and (presumed) Results/Discussion: the claim that the reversal is 'unique to devices with invasive voltage contacts' and 'unaffected by field reversal' is load-bearing for the vortex-nucleation interpretation, yet no local thermometry data, contact-resistance subtraction, or control measurements on non-invasive geometries are described to bound or exclude thermoelectric or resistive contributions.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract would be clearer if it briefly stated the range of applied fields, temperatures, and contact spacings used, as well as the definition of 'longitudinal differential voltage'.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thorough review and constructive comments. We address each major comment point-by-point below with clarifications drawn from the manuscript, while agreeing to revisions that add quantitative estimates and expanded artifact discussion.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the attribution of the observed edge-to-edge voltage reversal to opposite Bernoulli potentials generated by opposing vortex velocities at invasive-contact hotspots is presented without a derivation, estimate of vortex velocity/density, or calculated potential magnitude. This leaves open whether the mechanism can account for the reported voltages or whether contact resistance, thermoelectric gradients, or geometry could produce an equivalent antisymmetric signal.
Authors: The abstract summarizes our central interpretation; the full manuscript (Results and Discussion) explains the mechanism via particle-hole symmetry breaking within moving vortices, which generates opposing Bernoulli potentials at the two edges where invasive contacts create local hotspots for vortex nucleation. We agree that the original text lacks explicit derivations or order-of-magnitude estimates of vortex velocity and potential. In revision we will add a brief calculation section showing that vortex velocities obtained from the flux-flow relation E = B v are consistent with the measured voltages, thereby demonstrating that the proposed mechanism can account for the observed magnitudes. The edge-specific sign reversal and persistence under field reversal already help discriminate against simple contact-resistance or geometric artifacts. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract and (presumed) Results/Discussion: the claim that the reversal is 'unique to devices with invasive voltage contacts' and 'unaffected by field reversal' is load-bearing for the vortex-nucleation interpretation, yet no local thermometry data, contact-resistance subtraction, or control measurements on non-invasive geometries are described to bound or exclude thermoelectric or resistive contributions.
Authors: Comparative data across device types in the manuscript show the reversal only in invasive-contact Hall bars and explicitly demonstrate invariance under applied-field reversal. Differential voltage measurements subtract common-mode contact resistances. We acknowledge, however, that local thermometry and dedicated non-invasive control samples are not presented. In revision we will expand the discussion to quantify why thermoelectric gradients are inconsistent with the observed dependence on magnetic field and the dissipative state above Ic, and we will add any available non-invasive device comparisons from our dataset while clearly stating the limitation regarding thermometry. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No circularity: experimental observation with post-hoc attribution
full rationale
The paper reports direct magneto-transport measurements showing edge-to-edge longitudinal voltage reversal in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x Hall bars that is independent of field reversal and appears only with invasive contacts. It attributes the sign reversal to particle-hole symmetry breaking and opposing Bernoulli potentials from contact-nucleated vortices. No derivation chain, equations, or predictions are presented that reduce to fitted parameters, self-citations, or ansatzes by construction; the attribution is offered as an interpretive hypothesis for the observed data rather than a deductive result. The manuscript is therefore self-contained as an experimental report with no load-bearing circular steps.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Particle-hole symmetry is broken in moving vortices within the dissipative state of BSCCO
invented entities (1)
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Opposite Bernoulli potentials at device edges
no independent evidence
Reference graph
Works this paper leans on
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[1]
S. Y. F. Zhao et al., Sign-Reversing Hall Effect in Atomically Thin High-Temperature Bi2.1Sr1.9CaCu2.0O8+δ Superconductors, Phys. Rev. Lett. 122, 247001 (2019)
work page 2019
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[2]
H. Beidenkopf, T. Verdene, Y. Myasoedov, H. Shtrikman, E. Zeldov, B. Rosenstein, D. Li, and T. Tamegai, Interplay of Anisotropy and Disorder in the Doping-Dependent Melting and Glass Transitions of Vortices in Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ, Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 167004 (2007)
work page 2007
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[3]
I. M. Vishik et al., Doping-Dependent Nodal Fermi Velocity of the High-Temperature Superconductor Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+δ Revealed Using High-Resolution Angle-Resolved Photoemission Spectroscopy, Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 207002 (2010)
work page 2010
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[4]
E. H. Brandt, Tilted and curved vortices in anisotropic superconducting films, Phys. Rev. B 48, 6699 (1993)
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[5]
E. H. Brandt, The flux-line lattice in superconductors, Rep. Prog. Phys. 58, 1465 (1995)
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[6]
J. Bardeen and M. J. Stephen, Theory of the Motion of Vortices in Superconductors, Phys. Rev. 140, A1197 (1965)
work page 1965
discussion (0)
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