150 research outputs found
High transport currents in mechanically reinforced MgB2 wires
We prepared and characterized monofilamentary MgB2 wires with a mechanically
reinforced composite sheath of Ta(Nb)/Cu/steel, which leads to dense filaments
and correspondingly high transport currents up to Jc = 10^5 A/cm^2 at 4.2 K,
self field. The reproducibility of the measured transport currents was
excellent and not depending on the wire diameter. Using different precursors,
commercial reacted powder or an unreacted Mg/B powder mixture, a strong
influence on the pinning behaviour and the irreversibility field was observed.
The critical transport current density showed a nearly linear temperature
dependency for all wires being still 52 kA/cm^2 at 20 K and 23 kA/cm^2 at 30 K.
Detailed data for Jc(B,T) and Tc(B) were measured.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, revised version, to be published in Supercond.
Sci. Techno
Mechanically reinforced MgB2 wires and tapes with high transport currents
Monofilamentary MgB2-wires with a 2- or 3-component sheath containing
mechanical reinforcing stainless steel (SS) were prepared and characterized. In
direct contact to the superconductor Nb, Ta or Fe was used. For a selection of
samples with a Fe and Fe/SS sheath, we investigated the transport critical
current behaviour in magnetic fields changing systematically the geometrical
shape from a round wire to a flat tape. A strong increase of the current
densities in flat tapes was observed and possible reasons for this are
discussed. Reinforcing the sheath in the outer layer with different amounts of
stainless steel leads to a systematic field dependent decrease of the transport
critical current density with increasing steel amount. This is an indication
for a pre-stress induced degradation of the critical currents in MgB2 wires and
first Ic-stress-strain experiments seem to confirm this observation and
interpretation.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Submitted to Physica C (Proceedings of EUCAS
2001
Thermal and mechanical properties of advanced impregnation materials for HTS cables and coils
In the growing field of high-temperature superconducting (HTS) applications, finding an appropriate impregnation material for cables and coils remains a challenging task. In HTS cables and coils, tapes have to be able to withstand mechanical loads during operation. Impregnation is playing a role as mechanical stabilization. However, material properties usually change significantly when going to low temperatures which can decrease performance of superconducting devices. For example, a large mismatch in thermal expansion between a conductor and impregnation material at low temperatures can lead to delamination and to degradation of the critical current. Impregnation materials can insulate tapes thermally which can lead to damage of the superconducting device in case of quench. Thus, thermal conductivity is an important property which is responsible for the temperature distribution in a superconducting cable or in a coil. Due to Lorentz forces acting on structural materials in a superconducting device, the mechanical properties of these materials should be investigated at operating temperatures of this device. Therefore, it is important to identify an advanced impregnation material meeting all specific requirements. In this paper, thermal and mechanical properties of impregnation material candidates with added fillers are presented in a temperature range from 300 K to 4 K
The non-centrosymmetric lamellar phase in blends of ABC triblock and ac diblock copolymers
The phase behaviour of blends of ABC triblock and ac diblock copolymers is
examined using self-consistent field theory. Several equilibrium lamellar
structures are observed, depending on the volume fraction of the diblocks,
phi_2, the monomer interactions, and the degrees of polymerization of the
copolymers. For segregations just above the order-disorder transition the
triblocks and diblocks mix together to form centrosymmetric lamellae. As the
segregation is increased the triblocks and diblocks spatially separate either
by macrophase-separating, or by forming a non-centrosymmetric (NCS) phase of
alternating layers of triblock and diblock (...ABCcaABCca...). The NCS phase is
stable over a narrow region near phi_2=0.4. This region is widest near the
critical point on the phase coexistence curve and narrows to terminate at a
triple point at higher segregation. Above the triple point there is two-phase
coexistence between almost pure triblock and diblock phases. The theoretical
phase diagram is consistent with experiments.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Macromolecule
High current DyBCO-ROEBEL Assembled Coated Conductor (RACC)
Low AC loss high transport current HTS cables (>1 kA) are required for
application in transformers, generators and are considered for future
generations of fusion reactors coils. 2G coated conductors are suitable
candidates for high field application at quite high operation temperatures of
50-77 K, which is crucial precondition for economical cooling costs. As a
feasibility study we present the first ROEBEL bar cable of approx. 35 cm length
made from industrial DyBCO coated conductor (THEVA GmbH, Germany). Meander
shaped ROEBEL strands of 4 mm width with a twist pitch of 180 mm were cut from
10 mm wide CC tapes using a specially designed tool. The strands carried in
average 157 Amps/cm-width DC and were assembled to a subcable with 5 strands
and a final cable with 16 strands. The 5 strand cable was tested and carried a
transport current of > 300 Amps DC at 77 K, equivalent to the sum of the
individual strand transport critical currents. The 16 strand cable carried 500
A limited through heating effects and non sufficient stabilisation and current
sharing. A pulse current load indicated a current carrying potential of > 1 kA
for the 16 strand cable.Comment: EUCAS2005, 11th.-15th.Sept.2005, Vienna Austria, to be published in
SUST, special issu
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