抄録
The electronic specific heat of fine particles of Sn with the average radius ranging 130–1100 Å has been measured over a temperature range of 0.4Tc–1.5Tc. As the particle size decreases, the peak of the specific heat due to the superconducting transition shifts towards lower temperature and becomes broader. This behavior is interpreted as the fluctuations in “zero-dimensional” superconductors. The temperature width of the critical region teaches 0.1Tc for the smallest particles. A method of normalization of the specific heat is proposed to describe the fluctuation specific heat around Tc. By use of this method, the experimental data for different particle sizes can be normalized to a unified form.