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Effect of annealing high-dose heavy-ion irradiated high-temperature superconductor wires

Version 2 2024-06-13, 12:35
Version 1 2019-02-18, 14:23
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 12:35 authored by NM Strickland, SC Wimbush, P Kluth, P Mota Santiago, MC Ridgway, JV Kennedy, NJ Long
Heavy-ion irradiation of high-temperature superconducting thin films has long been known to generate damage tracks of amorphized material that are of close-to-ideal dimension to effectively contribute to pinning of magnetic flux lines and thereby enhance the in-field critical current. At the same time, though, the presence of these tracks reduces the superconducting volume fraction available to transport current while the irradiation process itself generates oxygen depletion and disorder in the remaining superconducting material. We have irradiated commercially available superconducting coated conductors consisting of a thick film of (Y,Dy)Ba2Cu3O7 deposited on a buffered metal tape substrate in a continuous reel-to-reel process. Irradiation was by 185 MeV 197Au ions. A high fluence of 3 × 1011 ions/cm2 was chosen to emphasize the detrimental effects. The critical current was reduced following this irradiation, but annealing at relatively low temperatures of 200 °C and 400 °C substantially restore the critical current of the irradiated material. At high fields and high temperatures there is a net benefit of critical current compared to the untreated material.

History

Journal

Nuclear instruments and methods in physics research, section B: beam interactions with materials and atoms

Volume

409

Pagination

351-355

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0168-583X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, Elsevier B.V.

Publisher

Elsevier