151 research outputs found
Apparent negative motion of vortex matter due to inhomogeneous pinning
We investigate the transport of vortices in superconductors with inhomgeneous pinning under a driving force. The inhomogeneity of pinning is simplified as strong-weak pinning regions. It is demonstrated that the interactions between the vortices captured by strong pinning potentials and the vortices in the weak pinning region cause absolute negative motion (ANM) of vortices: The vortices which are climbing toward the high barriers induced by the strong pinning with the help of driving force move toward the opposite direction of the force and back to their equilibrium positions in the weak pinning region as the force decreases or is withdrawn. Our simulations reveal that the hysteresis of ANM is determined by the competition between the speed of the negative motion which depends on the piining inhomogeneity in superconductors and the speed of the driving force. Under the conditions of either larger force scanning rate or higher pinning inhomogeneity, a marked ANM and a larger hysteretic speed-force loop could be observed. This indicates that the time window to observe the ANM should be chosen properly. Moreover, the V-1 characteristics of Ag-sheathed Bi=2223 tapes are measured, and experimental observations are qualitatively in agreement with the simulation
Very fast formation of superconducting MgB2/Fe wires with high Jc
In this paper we have investigated the effects of sintering time and
temperature on the formation and critical current densities of Fe-clad MgB2
wires. MgB2 wires were fabricated using the powder-in-tube process and sintered
for different periods of time at predetermined temperatures. All the samples
were examined using XRD, SEM and magnetisation measurements. In contrast to the
common practice of sintering for several hours, the present results show that
there is no need for prolonged heat treatment in the fabrication of Fe-clad
MgB2 wires. A total time in the furnace of several minutes is more than enough
to form nearly pure MgB2 with high performance characteristics. The results
from Tc, Jc and Hirr show convincingly that the samples which were sintered for
3 minutes above 800 oC are as good as those sintered for longer times. In fact,
the Jc field performance for the most rapidly sintered sample is slightly
better than for all other samples. Jc of 4.5 times 10 ^5 A/cm2 in zero field
and above 10 ^5 A/cm2 in 2T at 15 K has been achieved for the best Fe-clad MgB2
wires. As a result of such a short sintering there is no need for using high
purity argon protection and it is possible to carry out the heat treatment in a
much less protective atmosphere or in air. These findings substantially
simplify the fabrication process, making it possible to have a continuous
process for fabrication and reducing the costs for large-scale production of
MgB2 wires.Comment: 15 pages, one table, 9 figures, submitted to Physica C on June 8,
200
Magnetic Properties and Magnetocaloric Effect in Layered NdMn1.9Ti0.1Si2
The structural and magnetic properties of the NdMn1.9Ti0.1Si2 compund have been studied by high-intensity x-ray and high-resolution neutron powder diffraction, specific heat, dc magnetization, and differential scanning calorimetry measurements over the temperature range of 3-450 K. The Curie temperature and Néel temperature of layered NdMn1.9Ti0.1Si2 are indicated as TC ~ 22 K and TN ~ 374 K respectively. The first order magnetic transition from antiferromagnetic [AFil-type] to ferromagnetic [F(Nd)+Fmc] around TC is found in layered NdMn1.9Ti0.1Si2and is associated with large magnetocaloric effect. This behavior has been confirmed as a contribution of the magnetostructural coupling by using neutron and x-ray powder diffraction. The magnetic entropy change –ΔSM ~ 15.3 J kg-1 K-1 and adiabatic temperature change ΔTad ~ 4.7 K have been determined using magnetization and specific heat measurement under 0-5 T applied fields. This compound exhibits almost no thermal and magnetic hysteresis, thus potentially applicable in low temperature region for magnetic refrigerator material.Received: 31 December 2013; Revised:10 February 2014; Accepted: 24 February 201
Mechanism of Enhancement in Electromagnetic Properties of MgB2 by Nano SiC Doping
A comparative study of pure, SiC, and C doped MgB2 wires has revealed that the SiC doping allowed C substitution and MgB2 formation to take place simultaneously at low temperatures. C substitution enhances Hc2, while the defects, small grain size, and nanoinclusions induced by C incorporation and low-temperature processing are responsible for the improvement in Jc. The irreversibility field (Hirr) for the SiC doped sample reached the benchmarking value of 10 T at 20 K, exceeding that of NbTi at 4.2 K. This dual reaction model also enables us to predict desirable dopants for enhancing the performance properties of MgB2
Flux Jumping and a Bulk-to-Granular Transition in the Magnetization of a Compacted and Sintered MgB2 Superconductor
The recent discovery of intermediate-temperature superconductivity (ITC) in
MgB2 by Akimitsu et al. and its almost simultaneous explanation in terms of a
hole-carrier-based pairing mechanism by Hirsch, has triggered an avalanche of
studies of its structural, magnetic and transport properties. As a further
contribution to the field we report the results of field (H) and temperature
(T) dependent magnetization (M) measurements of a pellet of uniform,
large-grain sintered MgB2. We show that at low temperatures the size of the
pellet and its critical current density, Jc(H) - i.e. its M(H) - ensure low
field flux jumping, which of course ceases when M(H) drops below a critical
value. With further increase of H and T the individual grains decouple and the
M(H) loops drop to lower lying branches, unresolved in the usual full M(H)
representation. After taking into account the sample size and grain size,
respectively, the bulk sample and the grains were deduced to exhibit the same
magnetically determined Jc s (e.g. 105 A/cm2, 20 K, 0T) and hence that for each
temperature of measurement Jc(H) decreased monotonically with H over the entire
field range, except for a gap within the grain-decoupling zone.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Changes: Fig 6 Vertical scale an order of
magnitude out (changed figure and associated text). Also corrected typo in
last sectio
Effect of nano-carbon particle doping on the flux pinning properties of MgB2 superconductor
Polycrystalline MgB2-xCx samples with x=0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4
nano-particle carbon powder were prepared using an in-situ reaction method
under well controlled conditions to limit the extent of C substitution. The
phases, lattice parameters, microstructures, superconductivity and flux pinning
were characterized by XRD, TEM, and magnetic measurements. It was found that
both the a-axis lattice parameter and the Tc decreased monotonically with
increasing doping level. For the sample doped with the highest nominal
composition of x=0.4 the Tc dropped only 2.7K. The nano-C-doped samples showed
an improved field dependence of the Jc compared with the undoped sample over a
wide temperature range. The enhancement by C-doping is similar to that of
Si-doping but not as strong as for nano-SiC doped MgB2. X-ray diffraction
results indicate that C reacted with Mg to form nano-size Mg2C3 and MgB2C2
particles. Nano-particle inclusions and substitution, both observed by
transmission electron microscopy, are proposed to be responsible for the
enhancement of flux pinning in high fields.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figure
Nonequilibrium dynamics in type-II superconductors with inhomogeneous vortex pinning
We study numerically the dynamics relating to negative vortex motion in inhomogeneous pinning systems. We show that this dynamical phenomenon results from the internal field effect produced by the growing local barriers with decreasing temperature. We find that the negative motion is characterized
by a peak of negative voltage or resistance in resistance–temperature transport measurements. We also demonstrate that the time window to observe the negative motion is determined by the magnitude of driving force in addition to the temperature scanning rat
Origin of resistivity anomaly in p-type leads chalcogenide multiphase compounds
The electrical resistivity curves for binary phase compounds of p-type lead chalcogenide (PbTe)(0.9−x)(PbSe)0.1(PbS)x, (x = 0.15, 0.2, 0.25), which contain PbS-rich secondary phases, show different behaviour on heating and cooling between 500-700 K. This is contrast to single phase compounds which exhibit similar behaviour on heating and cooling. We correlate these anomalies in the electrical resistivities of multiphase compounds to the variation in phase composition at high temperatures. The inhomogeneous distribution of dopants between the matrix and secondary phase is found to be crucial in the electronic transport properties of the multiphase compounds. These results can lead to further advances in designing composite Pb-chalcogenides with high thermoelectric performance
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