Power applications of superconductors will be tremendously boosted if an effective method for magnetic flux immobilization is discovered. Here, we report the most efficient vortex-pinning mechanism reported so far which, in addition, is based on a low-cost chemical solution deposition technique. A dense array of defects in the superconducting matrix is induced in YBa(2)Cu(3)O(7-x)-BaZrO(3) nanocomposites where BaZrO(3) nanodots are randomly oriented. Non-coherent interfaces are the driving force for generating a new type of nanostructured superconductor. Angle-dependent critical-current measurements demonstrate that a strong and isotropic flux-pinning mechanism is extremely effective at high temperatures and high magnetic fields leading to high-temperature superconductors with record values of pinning force. The maximum vortex-pinning force achieved at 65 K, 78 GN m(-3), is 500% higher than that of the best low-temperature NbTi superconductors at 4.2 K and so a great wealth of high-field applications will be possible at high temperatures.
Structural and magnetic properties of γ-Fe2O3 have been studied in isometric nanoparticles ranging from 3 to 14 nm with a narrow particle size distribution. Cation vacancy order is observed for particles larger than 5 nm in diameter giving rise to a cubic superstructure, while for the smallest particles these vacancies are disordered. All magnetic properties measured showed a strong dependence on the average crystallite size. For the ordered samples, saturation magnetization was found to decrease linearly with decreasing crystallite size due to a surface spin canting effect. However, a stronger decrease was observed in the disordered samples, suggesting that also an internal spin canting (cation vacancy order−disorder) has to be taken into account to explain the magnetic properties of nanoparticles. The room-temperature coercive field decreases with decreasing crystallite size; however at low temperatures, the coercivity increases as the size decreases, reaching values larger than 3000 Oe. A model to explain the magnetic properties of these particles considering both surface and order−disorder effects is proposed.
Boosting large-scale superconductor applications require nanostructured conductors with artificial pinning centres immobilizing quantized vortices at high temperature and magnetic fields. Here we demonstrate a highly effective mechanism of artificial pinning centres in solution-derived high-temperature superconductor nanocomposites through generation of nanostrained regions where Cooper pair formation is suppressed. The nanostrained regions identified from transmission electron microscopy devise a very high concentration of partial dislocations associated with intergrowths generated between the randomly oriented nanodots and the epitaxial YBa(2)Cu(3)O(7) matrix. Consequently, an outstanding vortex-pinning enhancement correlated to the nanostrain is demonstrated for four types of randomly oriented nanodot, and a unique evolution towards an isotropic vortex-pinning behaviour, even in the effective anisotropy, is achieved as the nanostrain turns isotropic. We suggest a new vortex-pinning mechanism based on the bond-contraction pairing model, where pair formation is quenched under tensile strain, forming new and effective core-pinning regions.
Chemical solution deposition (CSD) has recently emerged as a very competitive technique for obtaining epitaxial films of high quality with controlled nanostructure. In particular, the all-CSD approach is considered to be one of the most promising approaches for cost-effective production of second-generation superconducting wires. The trifluoroacetate (TFA) route is a very versatile route for achieving epitaxial YBa 2 Cu 3 O 7 (YBCO) layers with high critical currents. In this work, recent advances towards improvement of the performance of several conductor architectures based on the YBCO TFA process will be presented. We show that new improved anhydrous TFA precursors allow a significant shortening of the pyrolysis time (∼1.5 h), and we have increased the total film thickness in a single deposition using polymeric additives. On the other hand, further understanding of the YBCO nucleation and growth process has allowed us to obtain a controlled microstructure and high critical currents (J c ≈ 4-5 MA cm −2 and I c ≈ 300 A cm −1 width at 77 K). The growth conditions (CSD) and post-processing conditions (sputtering and CSD) for the underlying oxide cap and buffer layers (CeO 2 , BaZrO 3 , SrTiO 3 , La 2 Zr 2 O 7 , (La, Sr)MnO 3 ) and of self-organized nanostructures (CeO 2 , BaZrO 3 ) deposited by CSD have been investigated to obtain high-quality interfaces in multilayered systems. Different single-crystal or metallic substrates (YSZ-IBAD (yttrium stabilized zirconia-ion beam assisted deposition) and Ni-RABiT (rolling assisted biaxial texturing)) have been investigated and long (≈10 m) CSD biaxially textured buffers (CeO 2 , La 2 Zr 2 O 7 ) have been grown on Ni-RABiT substrates using a reel-to-reel system. High-performance TFA-YBCO-coated conductors have been obtained on vacuum-based buffer layers (I c ≈ 140 A cm −1 width) and on CSD buffer layers grown on IBAD YSZ-SS (stainless steel) substrates. Finally, we report on recent analysis of the magnetic granularity and vortex pinning properties of TFA-YBCO conductors.
A methodology of general validity to study vortex pinning in YBa 2 Cu 3 O 7−δ (YBCO) is described. It is based on measuring the angular-dependent critical current density in a large range of temperatures and magnetic fields and it permits one to identify, separate and quantify the three basic vortex pinning contributions associated to anisotropic-strong, isotropic-strong and isotropic-weak pinning centers. The corresponding vortex pinning phase diagrams for these three contributions are built up. This methodology is applied to the recently discovered solution-derived YBCO-BaZrO 3 nanocomposites which display a maximum vortex pinning force of 78 GN m −3 at 65 K, being five times larger than that of NbTi at 4.2 K. These nanocomposites show an effective anisotropy tending to unity and the best superconducting properties observed so far in YBCO. We present the richness and complexity of their microstructure and the correlation with the vortex pinning properties. The application of the vortex pinning methodology and comparison with a standard solution-derived YBCO film enable us to identify the isotropic-strong defect contribution being at the origin of their unique properties.
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