Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
The first step towards high critical currents in Bi-2212 wires was recognizing that the
supercurrent is blocked over long lengths by filament-diameter bubbles grown during the melt
stage, which cause expansion of the wire diameter and dedensification of the superconducting
filaments. While a succesful approach to reducing the problem of voids related to bubbles
involved the application of a high overpressure during the heat treatment, we fabricated Bi-2212
wires by applying a new concept of suitably alternating groove-rolling and drawing techniques
with the aim of densifying the phase during the working procedure prior to the heat treatment.
We here for the first time were able to reach, in wires reacted with closed ends--i.e. with gas
trapped in the wire as it happens in long length wires--the very same values of critical current
shown in short wires reacted with open ends. This is the irrefutable evidence that, only by acting
on the deformation technique, we were able to raise the critical current by properly densifying
the superconducting powder inside the filaments already before the melt stage. Whole-conductor
current densities in our long-length simulation wires already reach 400 A mm-2 at 4.2 K and 5 T,
which can be still easily increased through architecture optimization. The actual breakthrough is
that the densification is optimized without further complex treatments through a technique which
can be straightforwardly applied to long length wires
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Bi-2212; engineering critical current density; groove-rolling; superconducting wire fabrication
Elenco autori:
Leveratto, Alessandro; Ferdeghini, Carlo; Malagoli, Andrea; Braccini, Valeria
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