4.5 Article

Small grains: a key to high-field applications of granular Ba-122 superconductors?

Journal

SUPERCONDUCTOR SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 29, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0953-2048/29/2/025004

Keywords

critical currents; granularity; iron-based superconductors; Josephson coupling; grain boundary currents; scanning Hall-probe microscopy

Funding

  1. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P22837-N20]
  2. European-Japanese collaborative project SUPER-IRON [283204]
  3. JST PRESTO
  4. JSPS [15H05519]
  5. NSF [DMR-1306785, DMR-1157490]
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [15H05519] Funding Source: KAKEN
  7. Division Of Materials Research
  8. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [GRANTS:13681527, 1306785] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  9. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P22837] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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The grain boundaries (GBs) of high-temperature superconductors (HTSs) intrinsically limit the maximum achievable inter-grain current density (J(c)), when the misalignment between the crystallographic axes of adjacent grains exceeds a certain value. A prominent effect resulting from large-angle GBs is a hysteresis of Jc between the increasing and decreasing field branches. Here, we investigate this feature for K-and Co-doped Ba-122 polycrystalline bulks with systematically varied grain size and find that the widely accepted explanation for this effect-the return field of the grains-fails. We use large-area scanning Hall-probe microscopy to distinguish Jc from the intra-granular current density (J(G)) in order to clarify their interactions. Measurements on Ba-122 bulks reveal that a large J(c) results from a small JG as well as small grains. An extended version of the model proposed by Svistunov and D'yachenko is successfully applied to quantitatively evaluate this behavior. The excellent agreement between the model and experiments suggests that the GBs limit the macroscopic current in all of the samples and that the inter-grain coupling is governed by Josephson tunneling. The predictions of the model are promising in view of realizing high-field HTS magnets. Our main result is that the field dependence of the J(c) of an untextured wire can be significantly reduced by reducing the grain size, which results in much higher currents at high magnetic fields. This result is not limited to the investigated iron-based materials and is therefore of interest in the context of other HTS materials.

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