Title :
Nb3(Al,Ge) multifilamentary wires made by the rapidly-heating/quenching process
Author :
Kikuchi, A. ; Iijima, Y. ; Inoue, K. ; Kosuge, M. ; Itoh, K.
Author_Institution :
Nat. Res. Inst. for Metals, Ibaraki, Japan
fDate :
3/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Nb3(Al,Ge) wires, made through the rapid-heating/quenching process, are very promising for the applications in high fields. The precursor wires were fabricated by a rod-in-tube method, and several kinds of Al-Ge alloys (Al-2at%, 5at%, 10at% and 20at%Ge) were used for the core materials. In the case of Al-20at%Ge alloy core, the disordered A15 phases formed directly with the rapid-heating/quenching. It is necessary for the as-quenched wires to be additionally annealed in order to improve the superconducting properties through the recovery of the long-range order of A15 crystal structure. The best values of Tc and Hc2 (4.2 K) for the Nb 3(Al,Ge) wires were 19.4 K and 39 T, respectively. Furthermore, Jc apparently increased with decreasing the Al-Ge alloy core size in the precursor wires. Jc (4.2 K, 25 T) of 0.3 μm-core Nb3(Al,Ge) wire exceeds 150 A/mm2 , which was about two times larger than that of 1.5 μm-core Nb 3(Al,Ge) wire. The results of TEM observation revealed that the reduction of Al-Ge alloy diameter enhanced the volume fraction of the A15-Nb3(Al,Ge) phases through increasing of diffusion pairs density in the composite. The diameter of A15 crystal grains is about 100 nm, and scarcely dependent on the Al-Ge alloy core size
Keywords :
aluminium alloys; critical current density (superconductivity); germanium alloys; multifilamentary superconductors; niobium alloys; quenching (thermal); rapid thermal annealing; superconducting critical field; superconducting transition temperature; type II superconductors; 4.2 K; Nb3AlGe; critical current density; critical fields; disordered A15 phases; long-range order; multifilamentary wires; rapid-heating/quenching process; rod-in-tube method; transition temperature; Annealing; Crystal microstructure; Crystalline materials; Fabrication; Magnetic cores; Multifilamentary superconductors; Niobium alloys; Superconducting filaments and wires; Superconducting materials; Telephony;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on