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      Thin Film Metal-Oxides 

      High-T c Superconducting Thin- and Thick-Film–Based Coated Conductors for Energy Applications

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      Springer US

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          Pinning in type II superconductors

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            Flux vortices and transport currents in type II superconductors

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              Addition of nanoparticle dispersions to enhance flux pinning of the YBa2Cu3O7-x superconductor.

              Following the discovery of type-II high-temperature superconductors in 1986 (refs 1, 2), work has proceeded to develop these materials for power applications. One of the problems, however, has been that magnetic flux is not completely expelled, but rather is contained within magnetic fluxons, whose motion prevents larger supercurrents. It is known that the critical current of these materials can be enhanced by incorporating a high density of extended defects to act as pinning centres for the fluxons. YBa2Cu3O7 (YBCO or 123) is the most promising material for such applications at higher temperatures (liquid nitrogen). Pinning is optimized when the size of the defects approaches the superconducting coherence length ( approximately 2-4 nm for YBCO at temperatures < or =77 K) and when the areal number density of defects is of the order of (H/2) x 10(11) cm(-2), where H is the applied magnetic field in tesla. Such a high density has been difficult to achieve by material-processing methods that maintain a nanosize defect, except through irradiation. Here we report a method for achieving a dispersion of approximately 8-nm-sized nanoparticles in YBCO with a high number density, which increases the critical current (at 77 K) by a factor of two to three for high magnetic fields.
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                Book Chapter
                2010
                November 16 2009
                : 233-253
                10.1007/978-1-4419-0664-9_7
                15bd6367-1ac2-4467-8ac5-4eb6d7b3525c
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