On extrinsic effects in the surface impedance of cuprate superconductors by weak links

1992 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 339-343 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Halbritter
1992 ◽  
Vol 275 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Halbritter

ABSTRACTPresently, the rf surface impedance Z of cuprate superconductors is still shrinking with material improvements, which is shown clearly by Z = Z1+Zres still dominated by extrinsic properties summarized in Zres. We present evidence that Zres is due to the large leakage current jbi and the small critical current jcj of weak links. The latter destroys the intrinsic shielding from a λ1 -thin seam λJ deep into the bulk. This causes rf residual losses Rres ≈ (ΩμO)2λJ3 σb1/2. Rres stays finite at T≃O by σb1(T→O)≈σb1(αjb1) being amplified by (λj/λ1>103 as a weighting factor. An appropriate measure of weak links is the grain boundary resistance Rbn(∝ρ(O)) enhancing λj ∝ Rbn and Rres ∝ Rbn2. Thus, Zres is minimal for minimal extrapolated normal conducting resistivity ρ(T→O).To identify the weak links as new entity the H-field dependence is most helpful, because at very low fields Hc1J∝ 1/λJ Josephson fluxons penetrate into the weak links. These Josephson fluxons show negligible flux flow or flux creep, and enhance Zres by λJ(H, T) ∝ l/√Jjc (H, T). The measured JcJ (H, T) - and Jbl - values explain Zres quantitatively as well as in temperature ∝ ( a+ Tn) (n ≈ 1, T<Tc/2) and in field ∝ (b + Hn) (n≈1, H>Hc1J) dependence being thus a unique method to obtain the different Hc1-values. The strength of the field dependence d Zres/dH ∝ Zres (Hc1J*)/Hc2J(T) is not only a measure of Zres and HC2j(T) but is crucial for nonlinear effects and (fluxon) noise also, which limits the performance of rf devices.


1994 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 453-458 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven M. Anlage ◽  
Dong -Ho Wu ◽  
Jian Mao ◽  
Sining Mao ◽  
X. X. Xi ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Y. Feng

Recently, Ag-clad tapes of Bi-cuprate superconductors have shown great promise for application as conductors in very high magnetic fields at temperature 4-20 K. High critical current densities (Jc) with weak field dependence indicate that the powder-in-tube process can drastically reduce the effect of grain boundary weak links at 4-20 K. It is thus of great interest to study the grain boundaries in the Ag-clad BSCCO tapes to understand their effect on the Jc.BSCCO Ag-clad wires with 2:2:1:2 starting composition were drawn and rolled to rectangular tapes (0.1 x 3 mm) with BSCCO core thickness of 45μm. The sample was heated at 920°C for 15 minutes, cooled to 840°C at 10°C/h, then annealed at 840°C for 70 h. The measured Jc values exceed 2x104 A/cm2 (5T, 4.2K) and do not exhibit obvious weak link behaviour. In order to investigate the (001) grain boundaries, samples were made by bonding several tapes together along their broad face. Thin longitudinal slices were cut and then ion milled at 4.5 kV in liquid nitrogen. TEM was carried out by using a JEOL 200CX-II at 200 kV.


1991 ◽  
Vol 249 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Hidalgo ◽  
Xin-Yu Zhanl ◽  
Sheng-Qi Wang ◽  
Baoshan Zhang ◽  
Jian-Zhong Zhang ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTA recently developed method for producing triaxial alignment of single crystalline grains may be applicable to ceramics other than the high-Tc cuprate superconductors for which it was designed as a means of reducing the grain boundary weak links due to grain orientational misfit. This technique uses a suitable combination of a mechanical force and a magnetic field acting on the moment of a rare earth element incorporated into the ceramic; a "granular single crystal" is thus formed. A detailed step-by-step procedure is presented here to facilitate use of the new approach.


1997 ◽  
Vol 56 (22) ◽  
pp. 14723-14732 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. McDonald ◽  
John R. Clem

Author(s):  
R. Sharma ◽  
B.L. Ramakrishna ◽  
N.N. Thadhani ◽  
D. Hianes ◽  
Z. Iqbal

After materials with superconducting temperatures higher than liquid nitrogen have been prepared, more emphasis has been on increasing the current densities (Jc) of high Tc superconductors than finding new materials with higher transition temperatures. Different processing techniques i.e thin films, shock wave processing, neutron radiation etc. have been applied in order to increase Jc. Microstructural studies of compounds thus prepared have shown either a decrease in gram boundaries that act as weak-links or increase in defect structure that act as flux-pinning centers. We have studied shock wave synthesized Tl-Ba-Cu-O and shock wave processed Y-123 superconductors with somewhat different properties compared to those prepared by solid-state reaction. Here we report the defect structures observed in the shock-processed Y-124 superconductors.


Author(s):  
S. J. Pennycook ◽  
P. D. Nellist ◽  
N. D. Browning ◽  
P. A. Langjahr ◽  
M. Rühle

The simultaneous use of Z-contrast imaging with parallel detection EELS in the STEM provides a powerful means for determining the atomic structure of grain boundaries. The incoherent Z-contrast image of the high atomic number columns can be directly inverted to their real space arrangement, without the use of preconceived structure models. Positions and intensities may be accurately quantified through a maximum entropy analysis. Light elements that are not visible in the Z-contrast image can be studied through EELS; their coordination polyhedra determined from the spectral fine structure. It even appears feasible to contemplate 3D structure refinement through multiple scattering calculations.The power of this approach is illustrated by the recent study of a series of SrTiC>3 bicrystals, which has provided significant insight into some of the basic issues of grain boundaries in ceramics. Figure 1 shows the structural units deduced from a set of 24°, 36° and 65° symmetric boundaries, and 24° and 45° asymmetric boundaries. It can be seen that apart from unit cells and fragments from the perfect crystal, only three units are needed to construct any arbitrary tilt boundary. For symmetric boundaries, only two units are required, each having the same Burgers, vector of a<100>. Both units are pentagons, on either the Sr or Ti sublattice, and both contain two columns of the other sublattice, imaging in positions too close for the atoms in each column to be coplanar. Each column was therefore assumed to be half full, with the pair forming a single zig-zag column. For asymmetric boundaries, crystal geometry requires two types of dislocations; the additional unit was found to have a Burgers’ vector of a<110>. Such a unit is a larger source of strain, and is especially important to the transport characteristics of cuprate superconductors. These zig-zag columns avoid the problem of like-ion repulsion; they have also been seen in TiO2 and YBa2Cu3O7-x and may be a general feature of ionic materials.


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