pseudosuperconductivity
Pseudosuperconductivity is a term used in theoretical discussions and some experimental reports to describe a transport regime in certain materials in which electrical resistance becomes extremely small and phase coherence features resemble those of superconductors, yet the state does not satisfy all the conventional criteria for superconductivity. In practice, pseudosuperconductivity often occurs only over limited length scales, temperature ranges, or in the presence of external fields, and may not extend to a bulk, fully zero-resistance state.
Experimental signatures typically include a large drop in resistivity upon cooling, non-Ohmic current-voltage behavior with a
Several mechanisms have been proposed to account for pseudosuperconductivity. Percolation of superconducting filaments in a non-superconducting
Candidate materials and platforms include ultrathin films near the superconducting threshold, oxide interfaces such as certain