EP1090398A2 - CRITICAL DOPING IN HIGH-Tc SUPERCONDUCTORS FOR MAXIMAL FLUX PINNING AND CRITICAL CURRENTS - Google Patents
CRITICAL DOPING IN HIGH-Tc SUPERCONDUCTORS FOR MAXIMAL FLUX PINNING AND CRITICAL CURRENTSInfo
- Publication number
- EP1090398A2 EP1090398A2 EP99931620A EP99931620A EP1090398A2 EP 1090398 A2 EP1090398 A2 EP 1090398A2 EP 99931620 A EP99931620 A EP 99931620A EP 99931620 A EP99931620 A EP 99931620A EP 1090398 A2 EP1090398 A2 EP 1090398A2
- Authority
- EP
- European Patent Office
- Prior art keywords
- htsc
- hole concentration
- composition
- controlling
- temperature
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Withdrawn
Links
- 230000004907 flux Effects 0.000 title description 11
- 239000002887 superconductor Substances 0.000 title description 2
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 69
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 50
- 230000007704 transition Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 8
- 239000000203 mixture Substances 0.000 claims description 43
- QVGXLLKOCUKJST-UHFFFAOYSA-N atomic oxygen Chemical compound [O] QVGXLLKOCUKJST-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 claims description 42
- 239000001301 oxygen Substances 0.000 claims description 42
- 229910052760 oxygen Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 42
- 238000006467 substitution reaction Methods 0.000 claims description 23
- 238000000137 annealing Methods 0.000 claims description 15
- 230000036961 partial effect Effects 0.000 claims description 13
- 229910052746 lanthanum Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 12
- 229910052779 Neodymium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 10
- 229910052712 strontium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 9
- 229910052772 Samarium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 8
- 230000002829 reductive effect Effects 0.000 claims description 8
- 229910052727 yttrium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 8
- 229910052765 Lutetium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 6
- 229910052788 barium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 6
- 229910002480 Cu-O Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 4
- 239000010409 thin film Substances 0.000 claims description 4
- 229910015901 Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O Inorganic materials 0.000 claims description 3
- 239000004020 conductor Substances 0.000 claims description 3
- 229910052692 Dysprosium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- 229910052691 Erbium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- 229910052693 Europium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- 229910052688 Gadolinium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- 229910052689 Holmium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- 229910052771 Terbium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- 229910052775 Thulium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- 229910052769 Ytterbium Inorganic materials 0.000 claims 7
- BERDEBHAJNAUOM-UHFFFAOYSA-N copper(I) oxide Inorganic materials [Cu]O[Cu] BERDEBHAJNAUOM-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 claims 1
- KRFJLUBVMFXRPN-UHFFFAOYSA-N cuprous oxide Chemical compound [O-2].[Cu+].[Cu+] KRFJLUBVMFXRPN-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 claims 1
- 150000001875 compounds Chemical class 0.000 abstract description 12
- 229910052761 rare earth metal Inorganic materials 0.000 description 19
- 150000001768 cations Chemical group 0.000 description 10
- 239000010949 copper Substances 0.000 description 10
- 238000006213 oxygenation reaction Methods 0.000 description 10
- IJGRMHOSHXDMSA-UHFFFAOYSA-N Atomic nitrogen Chemical compound N#N IJGRMHOSHXDMSA-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 8
- 238000009833 condensation Methods 0.000 description 8
- 230000005494 condensation Effects 0.000 description 8
- 229910052747 lanthanoid Inorganic materials 0.000 description 8
- 150000002602 lanthanoids Chemical class 0.000 description 8
- 229910052745 lead Inorganic materials 0.000 description 7
- 230000009467 reduction Effects 0.000 description 7
- 229910052716 thallium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 7
- 239000004593 Epoxy Substances 0.000 description 6
- KFZMGEQAYNKOFK-UHFFFAOYSA-N Isopropanol Chemical compound CC(C)O KFZMGEQAYNKOFK-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 6
- 206010021143 Hypoxia Diseases 0.000 description 5
- 230000003247 decreasing effect Effects 0.000 description 5
- 239000012535 impurity Substances 0.000 description 5
- 239000002245 particle Substances 0.000 description 5
- 239000000126 substance Substances 0.000 description 5
- QPLDLSVMHZLSFG-UHFFFAOYSA-N Copper oxide Chemical group [Cu]=O QPLDLSVMHZLSFG-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 4
- 229910052757 nitrogen Inorganic materials 0.000 description 4
- 239000008188 pellet Substances 0.000 description 4
- 230000035515 penetration Effects 0.000 description 4
- 238000005481 NMR spectroscopy Methods 0.000 description 3
- 229910052797 bismuth Inorganic materials 0.000 description 3
- 230000007423 decrease Effects 0.000 description 3
- 239000007788 liquid Substances 0.000 description 3
- 238000005259 measurement Methods 0.000 description 3
- 229910052753 mercury Inorganic materials 0.000 description 3
- 239000000843 powder Substances 0.000 description 3
- 239000002243 precursor Substances 0.000 description 3
- 150000002910 rare earth metals Chemical class 0.000 description 3
- 238000003841 Raman measurement Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000000969 carrier Substances 0.000 description 2
- 229910052802 copper Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 230000001419 dependent effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 208000037265 diseases, disorders, signs and symptoms Diseases 0.000 description 2
- 238000010438 heat treatment Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000012212 insulator Substances 0.000 description 2
- QSHDDOUJBYECFT-UHFFFAOYSA-N mercury Chemical compound [Hg] QSHDDOUJBYECFT-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 229910001092 metal group alloy Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 description 2
- 230000003595 spectral effect Effects 0.000 description 2
- 229910001316 Ag alloy Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 229910004247 CaCu Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- RYGMFSIKBFXOCR-UHFFFAOYSA-N Copper Chemical compound [Cu] RYGMFSIKBFXOCR-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 235000010627 Phaseolus vulgaris Nutrition 0.000 description 1
- 244000046052 Phaseolus vulgaris Species 0.000 description 1
- BQCADISMDOOEFD-UHFFFAOYSA-N Silver Chemical compound [Ag] BQCADISMDOOEFD-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 238000002441 X-ray diffraction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004564 bond valence sum analysis Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000013590 bulk material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229910052793 cadmium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 150000004649 carbonic acid derivatives Chemical class 0.000 description 1
- 238000006243 chemical reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910052804 chromium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000011248 coating agent Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000000576 coating method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000001276 controlling effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000002596 correlated effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000002788 crimping Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000002939 deleterious effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000009792 diffusion process Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000000694 effects Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000008020 evaporation Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000001704 evaporation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000000695 excitation spectrum Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000012530 fluid Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000007789 gas Substances 0.000 description 1
- PCHJSUWPFVWCPO-UHFFFAOYSA-N gold Chemical compound [Au] PCHJSUWPFVWCPO-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 229910052737 gold Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000010931 gold Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000005324 grain boundary diffusion Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910052735 hafnium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 230000002427 irreversible effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000000314 lubricant Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000010128 melt processing Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910052751 metal Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000002184 metal Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000003801 milling Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910052750 molybdenum Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000004570 mortar (masonry) Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000001683 neutron diffraction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 229910052758 niobium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 229910052762 osmium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 238000010248 power generation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000002250 progressing effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 230000002441 reversible effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 229910052702 rhenium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 229910052707 ruthenium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000007787 solid Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000003746 solid phase reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000010671 solid-state reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000725 suspension Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229910052715 tantalum Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- BKVIYDNLLOSFOA-UHFFFAOYSA-N thallium Chemical compound [Tl] BKVIYDNLLOSFOA-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 238000004448 titration Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000009466 transformation Effects 0.000 description 1
- 229910052721 tungsten Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 229910052720 vanadium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 229910052726 zirconium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H10—SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10N—ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- H10N60/00—Superconducting devices
- H10N60/80—Constructional details
- H10N60/85—Superconducting active materials
- H10N60/855—Ceramic superconductors
- H10N60/857—Ceramic superconductors comprising copper oxide
Definitions
- the invention comprises a method for preparing a high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) to maximise the critical current density of the material, in which the doping state or hole concentration of the material is controlled so as to lie at about the point where the normal-state pseudogap reduces to a minimum.
- HTSC high temperature superconducting cuprate material
- T c High-T c Superconducting Cuprates
- T c values alone do not guarantee the utility of these HTSC at 77K or higher temperatures.
- these applications require large critical current densities, J c , in the presence of a magnetic field.
- J c critical current densities
- Such high currents are only achieved if there is strong flux pinning within the individual grains.
- a simple measure of the flux pinning contribution to J c is the product, Uo ⁇ , of the condensation energy, U 0 , and the superconducting coherence length, ⁇ .
- H*(T) temperature-dependent irreversibility field
- H*(T) temperature-dependent irreversibility field
- HTSC have a fundamentally important feature that their properties vary with the concentration of doped electronic carriers.
- the carriers are electron holes, referred to in short as holes.
- the concentration of holes may be altered by chemical substitution or by changing the oxygen concentration.
- the hole concentration may be increased by substituting a lower valency atom for a higher valency atom or by increasing the oxygen content.
- the hole concentration, p may be decreased by substituting a higher valency atom for a lower valency atom or by decreasing the oxygen content.
- the hole concentration is increased from zero by substituting Sr 2+ for the La 3+ .
- the hole concentration may be decreased by substituting La 3+ for Ba 2+ or by decreasing the oxygen content as in the formula YB2Cu3 ⁇ 7- ⁇ where ⁇ may be increased from 0 to 1.
- ⁇ 1 this compound in an undoped insulator like La 2 Cu0 .
- the maximum T c value in this variation with hole concentration is T c>m ⁇ and it occurs at a hole concentration frequently referred to as optimal doping.
- the hole concentration is less than optimal doping the HTSC material is referred to as underdoped and when it is greater than optimal doping it is referred to as overdoped.
- Optimal doping then is seen as the key doping state to which other doping states are referred.
- the usual criterion for optimising superconductivity in HTSC was to maximise T c .
- the invention comprises a method for preparing a high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) to maximise the critical current density (J c ) thereof, comprising the step of controlling the doping state or hole concentration of the material to be higher than the doping state or hole concentration of the material that provides a maximum superconducting transition temperature (T c ) to increase the critical current density of the material.
- HTSC high temperature superconducting cuprate material
- the invention comprises a high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) having a doping state or hole concentration higher than the doping state or hole concentration of the material for maximum superconducting transition temperature (T c ) and at about a value where the normal-state pseudogap for the material reduces to a minimum and which maximises the critical current density (J c ) of the material.
- HTSC high temperature superconducting cuprate material
- the optimal doping for maximising T c is not the optimal doping for maximising flux pinning, U 0 , ⁇ v 2 or the critical current density J c .
- the pseudogap is manifested as a reduction in the normal-state entropy and susceptibility which strongly suppresses superconductivity and all measures thereof including T c , condensation energy and superfluid density.
- the method may include overdoping the HTSC so that the grain boundary regions between individual grains in the HTSC in particular are doped to maximise the critical current density across grain boundaries.
- grain boundary regions can tend to be underdoped even if the bulk intragranular material is optimally doped or even overdoped (- see Babcock et al (Physica C 227, 183 (1994)).
- the pseudogap will often be locally present in the grain boundary regions, the effective superconducting order parameter thus locally reduced, and the grains weakly linked. Additionally, impurities tend to accumulate at the grain boundaries.
- HTSC have a d-wave order parameter which is very sensitive to the presence of impurities T c being rapidly suppressed at a rate dT c /dy that depends strongly on doping state.
- the order parameter and the condensation energy are all much more rapidly suppressed due to impurity scattering than in the bulk intragranular material. Impurities in underdoped grain boundaries are therefore especially deleterious.
- the intragranular J c may be high, the intergranular J c may be low due to the underdoped state of the grain boundary regions.
- the method of the invention may be used in producing HTSC as bulk materials, wires, tapes or other conductor elements, or thick or thin films for example.
- Figure 1 is a plot for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3 ⁇ - ⁇ of the hole concentration dependence of T c , the pseudogap energy E g and the product U 0 ⁇ b where ⁇ a b is the ab-plane coherence length.
- Figure 2 is a plot of the hole concentration dependence of T c , E g and U 0 for Bi 2 Sr 2 CaCu 2 0 8+s .
- Figure 3 is a plot of the hole concentration dependence of ⁇ i/ 2 for Yo sCao 2 Ba 2 Cu 3 0 7 .s.
- Figure 4 is a plot of the p-dependence of the magnetisation (proportional to the critical current) of YBa2Cu3 ⁇ - ⁇ grain aligned in epoxy. Data is shown for different field strengths and temperatures as shown. The parabolic curve is T c plotted as a function of p.
- the parabolic curve is T c plotted as a function of hole concentration, p.
- Figure 6 is a plot of the p-dependence of the magnetisation critical current density in 0.2 Tesla at 10K and 20K as well as the irreversibility temperature at 5 Tesla for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3 ⁇ - ⁇ grain-aligned in epoxy.
- the parabolic curve is T c plotted as a function of hole concentration, p.
- the doping state or hole concentration is controlled or adjusted in producing the HTSC to maximise flux pinning and critical current density, to lie at or near a critical overdoped hole concentration (herein: critical doping) at which the normal-state pseudogap is minimised or disappears, and as a consequence the superconducting condensation energy sharply maximises and the London penetration depth, X L , sharply minimises.
- critical doping critical overdoped hole concentration
- the doping state or hole concentration of the HTSC may be controlled or adjusted by cation substitution, or by increasing the oxygen content of the material beyond that which gives maximum Tc, or a combination of both.
- Cation substitution to achieve critical doping may be by altervalent substitution sucii as substitution of Ca 2+ , Li + , Na + or K + for R 3+ in 123, 247 and 124 materials; Li + , Na + or K + for Ba 2+ in 123, 247 and 124 materials; R 3+ for Ca + in Bi-2212, Tl-2212, Tl- 1212 or Hg- 1212; Pb 2+ for Bi 3+ in Bi-2212 and Bi-2223; and Pb * » + for Tl 3+ in Tl- 1212 and Tl-2212.
- the compound Tlo sPbo sSr CaCu20 7 for example has a fixed stoichiometric oxygen content so cannot be adjusted to critical doping by changing the oxygen content.
- preferably 0. 12 ⁇ 0.04 Y is substituted for Ca or 0.12 ⁇ 0.04La for Sr in this compound to achieve critical doping.
- Other rare earth elements may be utilised in the same way in this and other HTSC compounds, noting that small rare earth elements should preferably be substituted for Ca and the larger rare earth elements preferably for Sr. Combined substitution on both the Sr and Ca sites may of course be utilised. Quite generally Li + substitution in any HTSC material is suitable for increasing the hole concentration of that material.
- Oxygenation to achieve critical doping may be achieved by conventional annealing in an oxygen-containing atmosphere or by titration using electrochemical means. Achieving the oxygen content required for critical doping in any HTSC may require the use of oxygen pressures in excess of 1 atmosphere or lower annealing temperatures than otherwise conventionally used to form the HTSC. Depending upon density of the HTSC such annealing may take many days to equilibrate and it may be more convenient to use higher oxygen pressures at higher temperatures where the kinetics of oxygen uptake is faster, or a combination of cation substitution with oxygenation such complete oxygenation is not required. The altervalent substitution of cations tends to alter the oxygen content.
- the HTSC material may be a Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O based material such as Bi-2212, which is of nominal composition Bi2Sr2CaCu2 ⁇ 3+ ⁇ where O ⁇ 0.35, or Bi-2223, which is of nominal composition B-2Sr2Ca2Cu3 ⁇ + ⁇ where 0 ⁇ 0.35 (where Bi may be partially substituted by Pb, Hg, Re, Os, Ru, Tl, V, Cr, Zr, Nb, Mo, Hf, Ta, W, Co or Sm, Sr may be partially substituted by Ba or a larger lanthanide rare earth element, and Ca may be partially substituted by Y or a lanthanide rare earth element for example, and in these chemical formulae it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials).
- Bi-2212 is of nominal composition Bi2Sr2CaCu2 ⁇ 3+ ⁇ where O ⁇ 0.35, or Bi-2223, which is of nominal composition B-2Sr2Ca2Cu3 ⁇ +
- Bi-2212 and Bi-2223 Bi is commonly partially replaced by Pb, such that Bi may be Bi ⁇ - z Pb z where 0 ⁇ z ⁇ 0.3.
- Especially preferred compounds include Bi2+ e Sr2CaC 2 ⁇ g + ⁇ Bi2+ x +eSr2- x -yCa ⁇ +y C 2 0 8+ ⁇ ) Bi2+e r2Ca2Cu3 ⁇ 10 + ⁇ and
- Bi-2212 and Bi-2223 may be varied by cation substitution (which increases the hole concentration p) R for Ca in Bi-2212 where R is Y or any lanthanide rare earth element, or Bi in Bi-2212 and Bi-2223 for example or by varying ⁇ .
- ⁇ may be fixed by annealing the HTSC at about (570 ⁇ 15)°C in an oxygen partial pressure of 0. 1 bar or at a combination of temperature and oxygen partial pressure giving the same value of ⁇ . Only a small ⁇ variability is possible in Bi-2223, which allows only minor changes in hole concentration.
- Bi-2212 may be substantially overdoped by full oxygenation to p «0.22 or 0.225 whereas B-2223 may only be doped to p «0. 17 or at most 0.18.
- Bi-2223 material may alternatively be prepared to incorporate intergrowths of Bi-2212 in Bi-2223. Intergrowths of Bi-2212 in Bi-2223 increase the doping state of the latter. Such hole-doping intergrowths can be introduced by substituting very small amounts ( ⁇ 1% and preferably ⁇ 0. 1%) of Y or a lanthanide rare-earth element on the Ca site.
- Bii sPbo 3Sr ⁇ 9Ca2Cu3 ⁇ o+ may incorporate intergrowths of Bii sPbo 3Sr ⁇ Bii 7sPbo.35Sr ⁇ gCa2Cu3 ⁇ o+ ⁇ may incorporate intergrowths of Bii 7sPbo 3sSr ⁇ gCaCu Os+ ⁇ "
- Bii 3 Pbo 3 4 Sn gCai 99CU3 o 4 O ⁇ o+ ⁇ may incorporate intergrowths of Bii 73Pbo 3 Sr ⁇ 9CaCu2 ⁇ s+ ⁇ ;
- Bii 88Pb 0 23Sri 96Ca ⁇ 95Cu 98 ⁇ o+ ⁇ may incorporate intergrowths of composition Bii ⁇ Pbo 23Sr ⁇ 96CaCu2 ⁇ s+ ⁇ ; and Bii 8 4 Pbo 28Sr ⁇ 93Ca ⁇ gsC ⁇ g ⁇ Oio+ ⁇ may incorporate intergrowths of composition Bii 8 4 Pbo 2 sSr ⁇ 93CaCu ⁇ s+ .
- the HTSC may be an R-Ba-Ca-CuO based HTSC such as the material R- 123, which is of nominal composition RBa2Cu3 ⁇ 7 - ⁇ where R is Y or a lanthanide rare earth element or a combination thereof and O ⁇ 0.5, (and R may be partially substituted by Ca, and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr, La or Nd for example, and it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials).
- Critical doping is preferably achieved by oxygenation to ⁇ 0.05, optionally combined with cation substitution, of Ca, Li, Na or K for R, or Li, Na, or K for Ba for example.
- R is a larger rare earth element
- small amounts of Ca are substituted for R so to achieve critical doping.
- Preferred compounds are Ri.
- ⁇ is as small as possible commensurate with critical doping.
- x typically x ⁇ 0.1 such that critical doping is achieved for ⁇ O.10. It is more preferable that x ⁇ 0.05 and ⁇ 0.03.
- the HTSC may be R-247, which is of nominal composition R2 -x Ca ⁇ Ba4Cu7 ⁇ i5. s where R is Y or a lanthanide rare earth element or a combination thereof and O ⁇ 0.5 (and R may be partially substituted by Ca, and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr, La or Nd for example, and it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials).
- Critical doping is preferably achieved by oxygenation to ⁇ 0.05, optionally combined with cation substitution, of Ca, Li, Na or K for R, or Li, Na, or K for Ba for example.
- Preferred compounds are R2- x Ca ⁇ Ba 4 Cu 7 Oi5- ⁇ where O ⁇ x ⁇ O.35 and 0 ⁇ 0.5 and R2- ⁇ Li x Ba4Cu 7 Oi5- ⁇ where 0 ⁇ x ⁇ 0.35 and 0 ⁇ 0.5 and wherein x and ⁇ are jointly adjusted so that the copper oxygen planes are critically doped as described above.
- ⁇ is as small as possible commensurate with critical doping.
- x typically x ⁇ 0.1 such that critical doping is achieved for ⁇ 0.10. It is more preferable that x ⁇ 0.05 and ⁇ 0.03.
- the HTSC may be R- 124, which is of nominal composition RBa Cu 4 Os where R is Y or a lanthanide rare earth element and 0 ⁇ 0.35 (and R may be partially substituted by Ca and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr, La or Nd for example, and it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials).
- Critical doping is achieved by cation substitution, of Ca, Li, Na or K for R, or Li, Na, or K for Ba for example.
- Preferred compounds are R ⁇ - x Ca ⁇ Ba Cu 4 ⁇ 8 and R ⁇ .xLixBa 2 Cu 4 08 where 0 ⁇ x ⁇ 0.35. Because 124 is typically even more underdoped relative to the equivalent 247 and 123 materials a higher level of cation substitution is required than in the equivalent 247 and 123 materials.
- a small rare earth such as Tl or Lu is desirable to achieve the higher Ca content required.
- the HTSC material may be a Tl-Sr-Ca-Cu-O based material such as Tl-1201, which is of nominal composition TlSr2CuOs+6, or Tl- 1212, which is of nominal composition TlSr2CaCu2 ⁇ 7+ ⁇ , or Tl-1223 which is of nominal composition TlSr Ca 2 Cu 3 ⁇ 8+ ⁇ (and where Tl may be partially substituted by Pb, Sr may be partially substituted by La or Ba, and Ca may be partially substituted by R, for example, and in these chemical formulae it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials).
- Tl-1201 which is of nominal composition TlSr2CuOs+6, or Tl- 1212, which is of nominal composition TlSr2CaCu2 ⁇ 7+ ⁇
- Tl-1223 which is of nominal composition TlSr Ca 2 Cu 3 ⁇ 8+ ⁇
- Tl may be partially substituted by Pb
- Sr may be partially
- the HTSC may also be a mercury-based HTSC such as Hg- 1212, which is of nominal composition HgBa2CaCu2 ⁇ 6+ ⁇ , or Hg- 1223 which is of nominal composition HgBa2Ca2Cu3 ⁇ s+ (and where Hg may be partially substituted by Tl, Bi, Pb or Cd, and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr for example, and in these chemical formulae it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials).
- Hg- 1212 which is of nominal composition HgBa2CaCu2 ⁇ 6+ ⁇
- Hg- 1223 which is of nominal composition HgBa2Ca2Cu3 ⁇ s+
- Hg may be partially substituted by Tl, Bi, Pb or Cd
- Ba may be partially substituted by Sr for example
- the critically-adjusted doping state may be quantitatively defined by the HTSC having an overdoped T c with the room temperature thermoelectric power Q(T RT ) in units of ⁇ V/K satisfying -4 ⁇ Q(TRT) ⁇ - 1 and more preferably -3 ⁇ Q(T RT ) ⁇ -2 where 280 K ⁇ T RT ⁇ 300 K.
- the critically-adjusted doping state may be quantitatively defined by the HTSC having an overdoped T with the normal-state constant-volume resistivity remaining linear in temperature from 250K down to less than 20K above T c .
- the normal-state constant-volume resistivity remains linear in temperature from 500K down to less than 20K above T c .
- the critically-adjusted doping state may be quantitatively defined by the HTSC having an overdoped T c with the temperature derivative of the normal-state constant- volume resistivity remaining constant within ⁇ 5% when the temperature is reduced from 250K down to less than 2 OK above T c and, more preferably, when the temperature is reduced from 500K down to less than 2 OK above T c
- the critically-adjusted doping state may be defined by annealing the HTSC in an oxygen-containing atmosphere previously determined to result in a critically overdoped T c with either T c , thermoelectric power or the normal-state resistivity lying within the above noted preferred margins or with the pseudogap having been critically suppressed to zero as determined by heat capacity, NMR spectroscopy, susceptibility or other means.
- Bi1.9Pbo.2Sr1 CaCu 2 ⁇ 8+ ⁇ may be annealed at 570°C in a mixture of 10% oxygen and 90% nitrogen gases (an oxygen partial pressure of 0.
- the doping state in any HTSC may be defined by Raman measurement of the frequency of a particular phonon mode, the desired frequency having been previously ascertained from a correlation with one of hole concentration, thermoelectric power, resistivity, oxygen annealing or T c value.
- One such mode is the 630 cm 2 A ⁇ g mode.
- the bulk material may be overdoped so that the grain boundary regions between individual grains in the HTSC are doped to maximise critical current density in the grain boundary regions of the HTSC in particular, even at some sacrifice maximal intragranular critical current density in order to maximise intergranular currents.
- cation solubility and oxygen activity will be different in grain boundaries. If for example Ca 2+ substitution is preferred in grain boundaries relative to the bulk then there is some prospect of critically doping both the grain boundaries and the bulk simultaneously. If Ca 2+ substitution is preferred in the bulk relative to the grain boundaries then a compromise, as discussed above, may be necessary.
- the method of the invention may be used in forming HTS materials into long-length flexible wires or tapes by the technique known in the art as powder-in- tube processing. This technique is especially used in the case of Bi-2212 or Bi-2223 materials. Powders of these materials or precursors to these materials are packed into a metallic tube, often made of silver metal or silver alloy, then by a process of deformation and heat treatment the tube is drawn out into a long wire and the oxide reacted to form a highly textured Bi-2223, for example, HTSC core. The wire may be rebundled once or many times to form a multifilamentary wire.
- Metallic alloy precursors may also be used to form such long wires and by heat treatment and deformation the metallic alloys are converted to oxides and reacted to form a highly- textured Bi-2223, for example, HTSC core.
- Other techniques such as coating or melt processing may also be used to form long-length wires or tapes.
- the materials may also be formed as thin films using any process as is known in the art or as bulk melt-processed single-domain or near-single-domain monolithic bodies.
- T c ,max is the maximum in the approximately parabolic hole- concentration dependence of T c (p).
- the pseudogap energy, E g was determined from fitting the temperature dependence of the entropy and values were confirmed by fitting the temperature dependent 8 Y NMR Knight shifts.
- the open triangles are the values of E g determined for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3 ⁇ 7 - ⁇ from NMR measurements and these show that the two methods give comparable results for E g .
- U 0 passes through an unexpectedly sharp maximum in the lightly overdoped region where E g becomes zero. Again U 0 approximately doubles on progressing from optimal doping to critical doping. This data for Bi-2212 is confirmed by direct heat capacity measurements.
- Figure 4 shows a plot of the magnetisation in units of emu as a function of p for measurements at 0.2T, 0.5T and 2T as well as at temperatures of 20K, 40K and 60K.
- the parabolic curve of T c as a function of p is also plotted to show that the sharp maximum occurs in the lightly overdoped state.
- the criticality of doping is very evident in this plot, especially at low temperature.
- H* is also seen to pass through a sharp maximum but the maximum occurs beyond critical doping because H* is governed by the product ⁇ a b 2 . ⁇ c 2 where ⁇ a b is the in-plane penetration depth and ⁇ c is the c-axis penetration depth.
- ⁇ a b 2 is proportional to the superfluid density which QC U 0 and hence passes through a sharp maximum at critical doping.
- ⁇ c oc p c the c-axis resistivity which monotonically decreases with doping, p.
- Samples of Tl 0 .5Pbo.5Sr2Ca ⁇ - x Y x Cu2 ⁇ 7 and 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3 and 0.4, and y 0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.25, 0.3 and 0.4 were synthesized by solid-state reaction of pellets in oxygen at 1060°C of a stoichiometric mixture of the oxides of Tl, Pb, Y, La and Cu and the carbonates of Ca and Sr.
- the precursor materials were first reacted without the TI2O3 which was then added for a further reaction at 1060°C. The reacted material was ground and resintered under the same conditions.
Landscapes
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Ceramic Engineering (AREA)
- Inorganic Compounds Of Heavy Metals (AREA)
- Superconductor Devices And Manufacturing Methods Thereof (AREA)
- Superconductors And Manufacturing Methods Therefor (AREA)
Abstract
A method for maximising critical current density (Jc) of high temperature superconducting cuprate materials (HTSC) which comprises controlling the doping state or hole concentration of the materials to be higher than the doping state or hole concentration of the material that provides a maximum superconducting transition temperature (Tc), and to lie at about a value where the normal-state pseudogap reduces to a minimum. Jc is maximised at hole concentration p≈0.19. HTSC compounds are also claimed.
Description
CRITICAL DOPING IN HIGH-Tc SUPERCONDUCTORS FOR MAXIMAL FLUX PINNING AND CRITICAL CURRENTS
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention comprises a method for preparing a high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) to maximise the critical current density of the material, in which the doping state or hole concentration of the material is controlled so as to lie at about the point where the normal-state pseudogap reduces to a minimum.
BACKGROUND
Many High-Tc Superconducting Cuprates (HTSC) are known to have superconducting transition temperatures, Tc exceeding the temperature at which liquid nitrogen boils, 77 K. As such they have a potentially large number of applications ranging from power generation, distribution, transformation and control, to high-field magnets, motors, body scanners, telecommunication and electronics. Tc values may be of the order of 93 K for example for YBa2Cu3θ7_§,
95K for example for B-2Sr2CaCu2θg, 109 K for example for Bi2Sr2Ca2Cu3θιø> 120K for example for TlBa2Ca2Cu3Oi 0 or as high as 134 K for HgBa2Ca2Cu3θ10.
For many of these applications such Tc values alone do not guarantee the utility of these HTSC at 77K or higher temperatures. Often these applications require large critical current densities, Jc, in the presence of a magnetic field. Even if the grains of the HTSC are crystallographically aligned, otherwise known as textured, and well sintered together, as is commonly achieved in thin-films, such that weak links between the grains are removed, a high critical current in the presence of a magnetic field is not guaranteed. Such high currents are only achieved if there is strong flux pinning within the individual grains. A simple measure of the flux pinning contribution to Jc is the product, Uoξ, of the condensation energy, U0, and the superconducting coherence length, ξ. An additional measure of the intrinsic ability of HTSC materials to support high critical currents in the presence of a magnetic field is the temperature- dependent irreversibility field, H*(T). For magnetic fields exceeding H* the magnetisation is reversible and hence dissipative while it is irreversible for fields less than H* and hence substantially non-dissipative. If for a
given temperature H* is large then at that temperature the critical current density for fields H<H* may be high. Many models for the irreversibility field have H* <χ λι 2 where λL is the in-plane London penetration depth. Thus if λ is minimised (λι 2 maximised) then H* may be maximised.
HTSC have a fundamentally important feature that their properties vary with the concentration of doped electronic carriers. The carriers are electron holes, referred to in short as holes. The concentration of holes may be altered by chemical substitution or by changing the oxygen concentration. In general, the hole concentration may be increased by substituting a lower valency atom for a higher valency atom or by increasing the oxygen content. The hole concentration, p, may be decreased by substituting a higher valency atom for a lower valency atom or by decreasing the oxygen content. Thus in La2C 04 which is an undoped insulator, the hole concentration is increased from zero by substituting Sr2+ for the La3+. In YBa Cu3θ7 the hole concentration may be decreased by substituting La3+ for Ba2+ or by decreasing the oxygen content as in the formula YB2Cu3θ7-δ where δ may be increased from 0 to 1. When δ = 1 this compound in an undoped insulator like La2Cu0 . By increasing the hole concentration from the undoped insulating state the HTSC eventually becomes superconducting at low temperature. This (lower) threshold hole concentration is about p=0.05, for example. If the hole concentration is increased too high beyond an upper threshold then the HTSC material becomes a non-superconducting metal even at the lowest temperature. This upper threshold is about p=0.27. Between the lower and upper thresholds Tc rises up smoothly from zero at the lower threshold to a maximum at about p=0. 16 then falls smoothly back to zero at the upper threshold. The maximum Tc value in this variation with hole concentration is Tc>m χ and it occurs at a hole concentration frequently referred to as optimal doping. The variation in Tc with hole concentration follows a nearly parabolic variation approximated by Tc(p)=Tc,max[l-82.6(p-0.162], so that as noted Tc maximises at p∞O.16. At optimal doping the room temperature thermoelectric power takes the value Q(290K)=+2μV/K (Tallon et al, US patent 5,619, 141 which is incorporated herein by reference). When the hole concentration is less than optimal doping the HTSC material is referred to as underdoped and when it is greater than optimal doping it is referred to as overdoped. Optimal doping then is seen as the key
doping state to which other doping states are referred. Prior to the present invention the usual criterion for optimising superconductivity in HTSC was to maximise Tc.
SUMMARY OF INVENTION
In broad terms in one aspect the invention comprises a method for preparing a high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) to maximise the critical current density (Jc) thereof, comprising the step of controlling the doping state or hole concentration of the material to be higher than the doping state or hole concentration of the material that provides a maximum superconducting transition temperature (Tc) to increase the critical current density of the material.
In broad terms in another aspect the invention comprises a high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) having a doping state or hole concentration higher than the doping state or hole concentration of the material for maximum superconducting transition temperature (Tc) and at about a value where the normal-state pseudogap for the material reduces to a minimum and which maximises the critical current density (Jc) of the material.
We have surprisingly found that the optimal doping for maximising Tc is not the optimal doping for maximising flux pinning, U0, λv2 or the critical current density Jc. We have found that Jc, flux pinning, U0, λv2 maximise at a higher doping state or hole concentration than that which maximises Tc and at about the point where the normal state pseudo-gap reduces to a minimum, particularly where the hole concentration 0. 18<p<0.20 and most particularly at about p=0. 19 or p=0. 19±0.005. We believe this is due to the presence, across the underdoped and slightly overdoped regions, of a correlated state that reduces low-energy spectral weight in the quasiparticle excitation spectrum. This reduction in spectral weight is referred to as the pseudogap and is sometimes mistakenly described as a spin gap. The pseudogap is manifested as a reduction in the normal-state entropy and susceptibility which strongly suppresses superconductivity and all measures thereof including Tc, condensation energy and superfluid density. The pseudogap energy, Eg, may be determined by fitting the normal state temperature dependence of the Knight shift, KS(T), to an equation KS(T) = Ko [1-tanh2 (Eg/2kT) + Kc where Kc is the chemical shift.
Eg may alternatively be determined by fitting the normal-state temperature dependence of the entropy, S(T) to an equation S(T)/T = g0 [tanh2(Eg/2kT)], where go is a constant.
Typically Eg is found to decrease with increasing hole concentration, p. More sophisticated means of determining Eg are known (see Tallon et al J. Phys. Chem. Solids 59, 2145 (1998) which is incorporated herein by reference) but the values of Eg thus determined still reduce approximately linearly with increasing hole concentration and, most importantly, still reduce to zero at about the same value p=0.19±0.005.
The method may include overdoping the HTSC so that the grain boundary regions between individual grains in the HTSC in particular are doped to maximise the critical current density across grain boundaries. Such grain boundary regions can tend to be underdoped even if the bulk intragranular material is optimally doped or even overdoped (- see Babcock et al (Physica C 227, 183 (1994)). The pseudogap will often be locally present in the grain boundary regions, the effective superconducting order parameter thus locally reduced, and the grains weakly linked. Additionally, impurities tend to accumulate at the grain boundaries. HTSC have a d-wave order parameter which is very sensitive to the presence of impurities Tc being rapidly suppressed at a rate dTc/dy that depends strongly on doping state. In the underdoped grain boundary regions Tc, the order parameter and the condensation energy are all much more rapidly suppressed due to impurity scattering than in the bulk intragranular material. Impurities in underdoped grain boundaries are therefore especially deleterious. Thus while the intragranular Jc may be high, the intergranular Jc may be low due to the underdoped state of the grain boundary regions.
The method of the invention may be used in producing HTSC as bulk materials, wires, tapes or other conductor elements, or thick or thin films for example.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
The invention is further described with reference to the accompanying figures wherein:
Figure 1 is a plot for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3θ -δ of the hole concentration dependence of Tc, the pseudogap energy Eg and the product U0ξ b where ξab is the ab-plane coherence length.
Figure 2 is a plot of the hole concentration dependence of Tc, Eg and U0 for Bi2Sr2CaCu208+s.
Figure 3 is a plot of the hole concentration dependence of λi/2 for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu307.s.
Figure 4 is a plot of the p-dependence of the magnetisation (proportional to the critical current) of YBa2Cu3θ -δ grain aligned in epoxy. Data is shown for different field strengths and temperatures as shown. The parabolic curve is Tc plotted as a function of p.
Figure 5 is a plot of the p-dependence of the irreversibility field at T=0.75TC for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3θ7-δ grain-aligned in epoxy. The parabolic curve is Tc plotted as a function of hole concentration, p.
Figure 6 is a plot of the p-dependence of the magnetisation critical current density in 0.2 Tesla at 10K and 20K as well as the irreversibility temperature at 5 Tesla for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3θ -δ grain-aligned in epoxy. The parabolic curve is Tc plotted as a function of hole concentration, p.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
In the method of the invention the doping state or hole concentration is controlled or adjusted in producing the HTSC to maximise flux pinning and critical current density, to lie at or near a critical overdoped hole concentration (herein: critical doping) at which the normal-state pseudogap is minimised or disappears, and as a
consequence the superconducting condensation energy sharply maximises and the London penetration depth, XL, sharply minimises. The critical hole concentration may be determined by use of the thermoelectric power, the temperature dependence of the resistivity, Raman measurements of the frequencies of certain phonon modes or by suitable annealing at elevated temperature in an oxygen- containing atmosphere previously determined to result in the critical doping state, or from the ratio of Tc/Tc,max where Tc,max is the maximum Tc observed in the superconducting phase curve Tc(p), estimated to occur at about p=0.16. The doping state or hole concentration of the HTSC may be controlled or adjusted by cation substitution, or by increasing the oxygen content of the material beyond that which gives maximum Tc, or a combination of both.
Cation substitution to achieve critical doping may be by altervalent substitution sucii as substitution of Ca2+, Li+, Na+ or K+ for R3+ in 123, 247 and 124 materials; Li+, Na+ or K+ for Ba2+ in 123, 247 and 124 materials; R3+ for Ca + in Bi-2212, Tl-2212, Tl- 1212 or Hg- 1212; Pb2+ for Bi3+ in Bi-2212 and Bi-2223; and Pb*»+ for Tl3+ in Tl- 1212 and Tl-2212. The compound Tlo sPbo sSr CaCu207 for example has a fixed stoichiometric oxygen content so cannot be adjusted to critical doping by changing the oxygen content. As prepared, this compound is overdoped with TC=79K and an estimated hole concentration p=0.215, and it is known that by substitution of 0.2- 0.25 Y on the Ca site or 0.2-0.25 La on the Sr site then the doping state may be reduced to optimal doping p=0. 16 where Tr is maximised to 105- 107 K. In accordance with the invention preferably 0. 12±0.04 Y is substituted for Ca or 0.12±0.04La for Sr in this compound to achieve critical doping. Other rare earth elements may be utilised in the same way in this and other HTSC compounds, noting that small rare earth elements should preferably be substituted for Ca and the larger rare earth elements preferably for Sr. Combined substitution on both the Sr and Ca sites may of course be utilised. Quite generally Li+ substitution in any HTSC material is suitable for increasing the hole concentration of that material.
Oxygenation to achieve critical doping may be achieved by conventional annealing in an oxygen-containing atmosphere or by titration using electrochemical means. Achieving the oxygen content required for critical doping in any HTSC may require the use of oxygen pressures in excess of 1 atmosphere or lower annealing
temperatures than otherwise conventionally used to form the HTSC. Depending upon density of the HTSC such annealing may take many days to equilibrate and it may be more convenient to use higher oxygen pressures at higher temperatures where the kinetics of oxygen uptake is faster, or a combination of cation substitution with oxygenation such complete oxygenation is not required. The altervalent substitution of cations tends to alter the oxygen content. Thus the substitution of Ca2+ for R3+ results in larger oxygen deficiency (larger δ) relative to the unsubsituted compound for the same annealing conditions. This larger oxygen deficiency can be eliminated by lower temperature oxygen annealing. Thus while full oxygenation of YBa Cu3θ7-δ might be achieved by annealing at 380°C in oxygen, full oxygenation of Yι-xCaxBa2Cu3θ7- (x = 0.2 for example) requires lower temperatures 300-350°C for example. Such low temperatures require longer annealing time. The same considerations apply to R-247.
The HTSC material may be a Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O based material such as Bi-2212, which is of nominal composition Bi2Sr2CaCu2θ3+§ where O<δ<0.35, or Bi-2223, which is of nominal composition B-2Sr2Ca2Cu3θιø+δ where 0≤δ<0.35 (where Bi may be partially substituted by Pb, Hg, Re, Os, Ru, Tl, V, Cr, Zr, Nb, Mo, Hf, Ta, W, Co or Sm, Sr may be partially substituted by Ba or a larger lanthanide rare earth element, and Ca may be partially substituted by Y or a lanthanide rare earth element for example, and in these chemical formulae it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials). In Bi-2212 and Bi-2223 Bi is commonly partially replaced by Pb, such that Bi may be Biι-zPbz where 0≤z<0.3. Especially preferred compounds include Bi2+eSr2CaC 2θg+§ Bi2+x+eSr2-x-yCaι+yC 208+δ) Bi2+e r2Ca2Cu3θ 10+δ and
]3-2+x+e£>r2-χC' a2C"u3C' lO+δ where 0<(e and x and ±y)<0.4, and
Biι.9Pbo.2Srι,9CaιCu208+δ. The doping state of Bi-2212 and Bi-2223 may be varied by cation substitution (which increases the hole concentration p) R for Ca in Bi-2212 where R is Y or any lanthanide rare earth element, or Bi in Bi-2212 and Bi-2223 for example or by varying δ. For
for example δ may be fixed by annealing the HTSC at about (570±15)°C in an oxygen partial pressure of 0. 1 bar or at a combination of temperature and oxygen partial pressure giving the same value of δ. Only a small δ variability is possible in Bi-2223, which allows only minor changes
in hole concentration. Bi-2212 may be substantially overdoped by full oxygenation to p«0.22 or 0.225 whereas B-2223 may only be doped to p«0. 17 or at most 0.18. Bi-2223 material may alternatively be prepared to incorporate intergrowths of Bi-2212 in Bi-2223. Intergrowths of Bi-2212 in Bi-2223 increase the doping state of the latter. Such hole-doping intergrowths can be introduced by substituting very small amounts (< 1% and preferably <0. 1%) of Y or a lanthanide rare-earth element on the Ca site. In preferred forms Bii sPbo 3Srι 9Ca2Cu3θιo+ may incorporate intergrowths of Bii sPbo 3Srι
Bii 7sPbo.35Srι gCa2Cu3θιo+δ may incorporate intergrowths of Bii 7sPbo 3sSrι gCaCu Os+δ" Bii 3Pbo 34Sn gCai 99CU3 o4Oιo+δ may incorporate intergrowths of Bii 73Pbo 3 Srι 9CaCu2θs+δ;
Bii 88Pb023Sri 96Caι 95Cu 98θιo+δ may incorporate intergrowths of composition Bii ββPbo 23Srι 96CaCu2θs+δ; and Bii 84Pbo 28Srι 93Caι gsC^ gβOio+δ may incorporate intergrowths of composition Bii 84Pbo 2sSrι 93CaCu θs+ .
The HTSC may be an R-Ba-Ca-CuO based HTSC such as the material R- 123, which is of nominal composition RBa2Cu3θ7-δ where R is Y or a lanthanide rare earth element or a combination thereof and O<δ<0.5, (and R may be partially substituted by Ca, and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr, La or Nd for example, and it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials). Critical doping is preferably achieved by oxygenation to δ<0.05, optionally combined with cation substitution, of Ca, Li, Na or K for R, or Li, Na, or K for Ba for example. Critical doping is achieved very close to the point δ=0 for R=Y, and δ close to but >0 for a small rare earth such as Tl or Lu. Preferably where R is a larger rare earth element small amounts of Ca are substituted for R so to achieve critical doping. For larger rare earth elements it may not be possible to reach the critical doping state by merely reducing δ towards zero. This is partly because some R resides on the Ba site where R is a large rare earth element but even if suitable processing to avert such substitution is utilised the charge transfer from CuO chains to Cuθ2 planes is insufficient to achieve critical doping. Preferred compounds are Ri. xCaχBa2Cu3θ7-δ where 0<x<0.35 and 0<δ<0.5 and Rι-χLixBa2Cu3θ7-δ where 0≤x≤0.35 and 0<δ<0.5 and wherein x and δ are jointly adjusted so that the copper oxygen planes are critically doped as described above. Preferably δ is as small as possible commensurate with critical doping. Thus in this preferred form a value of x is
chosen, typically x<0.1 such that critical doping is achieved for δ≤O.10. It is more preferable that x<0.05 and δ<0.03.
The HTSC may be R-247, which is of nominal composition R2-xCaχBa4Cu7θi5.s where R is Y or a lanthanide rare earth element or a combination thereof and O<δ<0.5 (and R may be partially substituted by Ca, and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr, La or Nd for example, and it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials). Critical doping is preferably achieved by oxygenation to δ<0.05, optionally combined with cation substitution, of Ca, Li, Na or K for R, or Li, Na, or K for Ba for example. Preferred compounds are R2-xCaχBa4Cu7Oi5-δ where O≤x≤O.35 and 0≤δ<0.5 and R2-χLixBa4Cu7Oi5-δ where 0<x<0.35 and 0<δ<0.5 and wherein x and δ are jointly adjusted so that the copper oxygen planes are critically doped as described above. Preferably δ is as small as possible commensurate with critical doping. Thus in this preferred form a value of x is chosen, typically x<0.1 such that critical doping is achieved for δ<0.10. It is more preferable that x<0.05 and δ<0.03. Because 247 is typically underdoped relative to the equivalent 123 materials the magnitude of Ca content given by x will be required to be greater than in the equivalent 123 materials. A small rare earth such as Tl or Lu is desirable in that a higher Ca content may be achieved than for the larger rare earth elements.
The HTSC may be R- 124, which is of nominal composition RBa Cu4Os where R is Y or a lanthanide rare earth element and 0<δ<0.35 (and R may be partially substituted by Ca and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr, La or Nd for example, and it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials). Critical doping is achieved by cation substitution, of Ca, Li, Na or K for R, or Li, Na, or K for Ba for example. Preferred compounds are Rι-xCaχBa Cu4θ8 and Rι.xLixBa2Cu408 where 0≤x<0.35. Because 124 is typically even more underdoped relative to the equivalent 247 and 123 materials a higher level of cation substitution is required than in the equivalent 247 and 123 materials. A small rare earth such as Tl or Lu is desirable to achieve the higher Ca content required.
The HTSC material may be a Tl-Sr-Ca-Cu-O based material such as Tl-1201, which is of nominal composition TlSr2CuOs+6, or Tl- 1212, which is of nominal composition
TlSr2CaCu2θ7+δ, or Tl-1223 which is of nominal composition TlSr Ca2Cu3θ8+δ (and where Tl may be partially substituted by Pb, Sr may be partially substituted by La or Ba, and Ca may be partially substituted by R, for example, and in these chemical formulae it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials). Preferred compounds are
Tlo.5Pbo.5Sr2-wBawCaCu2θ7, Tlo.5Pbo.5Sr2-xLaxCaC 2θ7, and Tlo.sPbo.sSraCai-yRyCuaOr where 0<(x and w)<2, O≤y≤l and R is Y or any of the lanthanide rare earth elements, or more generally (Tl,Pb,Bi)ι(Sr,Ba,La)2(Ca,R)ιCu2θ7, and Tlo.5Pbo.5Sr2-χCaχCa2Cu3Og and Tlo.5Pbo.5Sr2- -χBawCaxCa2Cu3θ9 where O≤x, w≤l or more generally (Tl,Pb,Bi)ι(Sr,Ba,La)2Ca2Cu3θ9, where -0.3<δ<0.3.
The HTSC may also be a mercury-based HTSC such as Hg- 1212, which is of nominal composition HgBa2CaCu2θ6+δ, or Hg- 1223 which is of nominal composition HgBa2Ca2Cu3θs+ (and where Hg may be partially substituted by Tl, Bi, Pb or Cd, and Ba may be partially substituted by Sr for example, and in these chemical formulae it is also recognised in the art that small variations in stoichiometry are common in such oxide materials).
The critically-adjusted doping state may be quantitatively defined by the HTSC having an overdoped Tc satisfying 0.91Tc,max<Tc≤0.96Tc,max more preferably 0.92Tc,max<Tc<0.95Tc,max and most preferably Tc = (0.93±0.005)Tc>maχ.
The critically-adjusted doping state may be quantitatively defined by the HTSC having an overdoped Tc with the room temperature thermoelectric power Q(TRT) in units of μV/K satisfying -4 < Q(TRT) < - 1 and more preferably -3 < Q(TRT) < -2 where 280 K < TRT <300 K.
The critically-adjusted doping state may be quantitatively defined by the HTSC having an overdoped T with the normal-state constant-volume resistivity remaining linear in temperature from 250K down to less than 20K above Tc. In a more preferred form the normal-state constant-volume resistivity remains linear in temperature from 500K down to less than 20K above Tc.
The critically-adjusted doping state may be quantitatively defined by the HTSC having an overdoped Tc with the temperature derivative of the normal-state constant- volume resistivity remaining constant within ±5% when the temperature is reduced from 250K down to less than 2 OK above Tc and, more preferably, when the temperature is reduced from 500K down to less than 2 OK above Tc
The critically-adjusted doping state may be defined by annealing the HTSC in an oxygen-containing atmosphere previously determined to result in a critically overdoped Tc with either Tc, thermoelectric power or the normal-state resistivity lying within the above noted preferred margins or with the pseudogap having been critically suppressed to zero as determined by heat capacity, NMR spectroscopy, susceptibility or other means. For example, Bi1.9Pbo.2Sr1 CaCu2θ8+δ may be annealed at 570°C in a mixture of 10% oxygen and 90% nitrogen gases (an oxygen partial pressure of 0. 1 bar) to achieve critical over-doping with TC=83.7K in a system with Tc,max=90.5 K. This gives a Tc reduction of 7.5%, a hole concentration of p=0.19 and a maximal condensation energy of 1.76 J/g.at as determined by heat capacity measurements. Yo,8Cao,2Ba Cu3θ7-δ may be annealed at 530°C in oxygen to achieve critical-overdoping with TC=79K where Tc,max=85.5K, that is a 7.6% reduction in Tc, an estimated hole concentration of ρ=0.19 and a maximal condensation energy of 2.5 J/g.at. Other alternative combinations of temperature and oxygen partial pressure to achieve critical doping can be used (such as higher temperature and a consequent higher oxygen partial pressure).
The doping state in any HTSC may be defined by Raman measurement of the frequency of a particular phonon mode, the desired frequency having been previously ascertained from a correlation with one of hole concentration, thermoelectric power, resistivity, oxygen annealing or Tc value. One such mode is the 630 cm 2 Aιg mode.
In R- 123 as well as achieving the required degree of oxygenation it is necessary to achieve ordering of the oxygens into chains with a minimum of vacancies on the chains so as to ensure sufficient charge transfer to the Cu02 planes. Because oxygen disordering occurs for T > 50°C it is ideally necessary to slow cool from the annealing temperature to room temperature so as to allow oxygen ordering on the chains and thus complete charge transfer and maximal doping. Moreover, such
defect-free CuO chains contribute additionally to the superfluid density and thus further increase Jc.
In order to achieve optimal doping in grain boundaries the bulk material may be overdoped so that the grain boundary regions between individual grains in the HTSC are doped to maximise critical current density in the grain boundary regions of the HTSC in particular, even at some sacrifice maximal intragranular critical current density in order to maximise intergranular currents. In contrast to the bulk, cation solubility and oxygen activity will be different in grain boundaries. If for example Ca2+ substitution is preferred in grain boundaries relative to the bulk then there is some prospect of critically doping both the grain boundaries and the bulk simultaneously. If Ca2+ substitution is preferred in the bulk relative to the grain boundaries then a compromise, as discussed above, may be necessary. Because of the site disorder in grain boundaries the energy wells for oxygen occupancy will not be as deep as in the bulk and as a consequence, lower temperatures (and/or higher oxygen pressures) may be required to oxygenate the grain boundaries than is required to oxygenate the bulk. Annealing temperatures as low as 100°C to 200°C may be required to adequately oxygenate the grain boundaries to achieve critical doping therein. While at such low temperatures oxygen diffusion will be prohibitively slow within the bulk, grain boundary diffusion rates will be much higher due to the disorder therein thus making critical oxygenation of grain boundaries below 300°C or even below 300°C entirely practicable.
The method of the invention may be used in forming HTS materials into long-length flexible wires or tapes by the technique known in the art as powder-in- tube processing. This technique is especially used in the case of Bi-2212 or Bi-2223 materials. Powders of these materials or precursors to these materials are packed into a metallic tube, often made of silver metal or silver alloy, then by a process of deformation and heat treatment the tube is drawn out into a long wire and the oxide reacted to form a highly textured Bi-2223, for example, HTSC core. The wire may be rebundled once or many times to form a multifilamentary wire. Metallic alloy precursors may also be used to form such long wires and by heat treatment and deformation the metallic alloys are converted to oxides and reacted to form a highly- textured Bi-2223, for example, HTSC core. Other techniques such as coating or melt
processing may also be used to form long-length wires or tapes. The materials may also be formed as thin films using any process as is known in the art or as bulk melt-processed single-domain or near-single-domain monolithic bodies.
EXAMPLES
The invention is further illustrated by the following examples:
Example 1:
Samples of Yo sCao 2Ba Cu3θ7-δ were investigated as a function of oxygen deficiency, δ, using heat capacity, Cp, and NMR spectroscopy. This HTS material is especially useful because its doping state may be altered from heavily underdoped to heavily overdoped as δ is altered from 1 to 0. The hole concentration was determined using the thermoelectric power correlation between Q(290) and p (Tallon et al., US Patent 5,619, 141). The values were found to agree well with values determined from the parabolic relationship between Tc and p Tc(p)=Tc,max [l - 82.6(p-0. 16)2] and also from estimates of p using bond valence sums from neutron diffraction refinement of atomic coordinates. Tc,max is the maximum in the approximately parabolic hole- concentration dependence of Tc(p). The pseudogap energy, Eg, was determined from fitting the temperature dependence of the entropy and values were confirmed by fitting the temperature dependent 8 Y NMR Knight shifts. Both Tc and Eg are plotted in Figure 1 as functions of p. Eg is seen to fall progressively with increasing doping and reaches zero at about p=0.19 i.e. on the overdoped side and about 0.03 holes per copper higher than the optimal concentration for which Tc is maximised. Alternatively Eg reaches zero when Tc has fallen 7.4% below Tc>max on the overdoped side. The condensation energy U0 was determined by integrating the entropy S(T) from T=0 to T=TC between the normal state curve SNS(T) and the superconducting curve Ssc(T). U0 is found to maximise very sharply at the point p=0. 19 where Eg reaches zero. The product Uoξab does not peak quite as sharply but the data plotted in Figure 1 shows that it stills passes through a rather sharp peak, again maximising at the point where Eg-»0. As a consequence flux pinning and critical currents will also sharply maximise at this point. Most notably the value of U0ξab at optimum doping for maximal Tc is about 39 J.nm/mole while it is nearly double that value (76
J.nm/mole) at critical doping where Eg- 0. Such a large increase for such a small decrease (6K) in Tc is most unexpected and hitherto unknown and offers great benefit for maximising critical currents with little loss in Tc value. For other HTSC materials the Tc reduction will be proportionally the same so that for Bi-2223 a reduction of Tc from TC)max= l 10 K to 103 or 102 K on the overdoped side is not a serious reduction in Tc when cooled to liquid nitrogen temperature yet potentially affords a doubling of flux pinning.
Example 2:
Samples of overdoped Bi2Sr2CaCu θs+δ with different δ and underdoped Bi2Sr2Cao 7Y03Cu2θs+δ with different δ were substituted with a range of Co on the Cu site. From the rate of impurity depression of Tc, dTc/dy, due to the fraction y of Co one may determine the value of the value of γ=Cp/T at T=TC. Using scaling relations (Tallon, Phys. Rev. B - 58, R5956 (1998)) one may thence determine Eg and UD which are plotted in Fig. 2 by the filled symbols. The open triangles are the values of Eg determined for Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3θ7-δ from NMR measurements and these show that the two methods give comparable results for Eg. Again one may see that for Bi2Sr2CaCu208+6, as in Y0 sCao 2Ba2Cu3θ7-δ, U0 passes through an unexpectedly sharp maximum in the lightly overdoped region where Eg becomes zero. Again U0 approximately doubles on progressing from optimal doping to critical doping. This data for Bi-2212 is confirmed by direct heat capacity measurements. It is believed that the maximising of U0 and U0ξ at critical doping where Eg becomes zero is a universal behaviour amongst the HTSC materials as has been confirmed in La2-xSrxCu04 and in Tlo 5Pbo 5Sr2Caι-xYxCu2θ7. It is thus reasonable that this behaviour is also common to the thallium-based and mercury-based HTSC.
Example 3:
Samples of Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3θ7- were investigated as a function of oxygen deficiency, δ, using muon spin relaxation. The muon spin relaxation rate at T=0, σ0, is proportional to λι 2. Figure 3 shows a plot of v2 as a function of hole concentration, p. λi 2. may be seen to pass through a sharp maximum at the critical point p-sO.19 where Eg becomes zero. λ 2 is a key parameter in determining the magnitude of the
irreversibility field. As a consequence critical doping at p-sO.19 not only sharply maximises flux pinning but will result in high irreversibility fields.
Example 4:
Seven pellets of Y08Cao.2Ba2Cu3θ7-δ were synthesized and annealed under various temperatures and oxygen partial pressures then quenched into liquid nitrogen to freeze in the equilibrium oxygen content. Thus 7 samples with different values of oxygen deficiency δ were obtained which accordingly have 7 different hole concentrations spanning the range 0.09<p<0.23. These pellets were each ground to a very fine powder with a mortar and pestle using isopropyl alcohol as a lubricant and milling for a period of 1 hour. The powder was then suspended in isopropyl alcohol and settled for a period of 30 minutes and the fluid with the remaining suspension was drawn off and dried by evaporation. In this way the large particles were settled out and the remaining particles were of size < 5μm. These small particles were well mixed with epoxy. The mixture was then placed in rubber moulds and mounted in an electromagnet to align the particles with c-axes parallel to the field while the epoxy set. The aligning field was approximately 1 tesla. After setting the alignment was confirmed by x-ray diffraction which showed primarily c-axis reflections on the face normal to the aligning field. Small samples were cut from each of the 7 aligned samples and their magnetisation was determined as a function of field strength and temperature using a vibrating- sample magnetometer. Figure 4 shows a plot of the magnetisation in units of emu as a function of p for measurements at 0.2T, 0.5T and 2T as well as at temperatures of 20K, 40K and 60K. The data can be seen to pass through a sharp maximum at the critical doping concentration of p=0.19. For reference the parabolic curve of Tc as a function of p is also plotted to show that the sharp maximum occurs in the lightly overdoped state. This parabolic curve is calculated using the formula Tc = Tc,max [1 - 82.6(p-0. 16)2] which well describes Tc(p) for many of the HTS cuprates, and probably all. The criticality of doping is very evident in this plot, especially at low temperature. The ureversibility line H*(T) was also determined for each sample at T=0.75TC and is plotted in Fig. 5. Here H* is also seen to pass through a sharp maximum but the maximum occurs beyond critical doping because H* is governed by the product λab 2.λc 2 where λab is the in-plane penetration depth and λc is the c-axis penetration depth. λab 2 is proportional to the
superfluid density which QC U0 and hence passes through a sharp maximum at critical doping. On the other hand λc oc pc, the c-axis resistivity which monotonically decreases with doping, p. Thus the maximum in irreversibility field occurs beyond critical doping just as shown in Fig. 5. However it is to be noted that because in Fig. 5 T=0.75TC this data is not for fixed temperature. For conditions of fixed temperature (and fixed field) critical current maximises at critical doping. It is further to be noted that in the samples of this example all grains are separated from each other. The currents are all intragranular currents and do not reflect on grain boundary currents.
Example 5:
The samples of Example 4 were examined in a scanning electron microscope to determine the distribution of particle sizes. The total mass in each sample was then determined by pyrolising off the epoxy. The magnetisation data of Example 4 was then converted to critical current density, Jc, using the well-known method of the Bean formula. The thus obtained Jc values for an applied field of 0.2 Tesla and at temperatures of 10K and 20K are plotted as a function of hole concentration, p, in Figure 6. The irreversibility temperature, Tιrr, at 5 Tesla is also plotted in the figure together with the p-dependence of transition temperature,Tc. Both Jc and Tιrr are seen to maximise close to the critical doping state ρ=0. 19 and well beyond the point p=0.16 where Tc maximises.
Example 6:
Samples of Tl0.5Pbo.5Sr2Caι-xYxCu2θ7 and
0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.3 and 0.4, and y=0, 0.05, 0.1, 0.2, 0.25, 0.3 and 0.4 were synthesized by solid-state reaction of pellets in oxygen at 1060°C of a stoichiometric mixture of the oxides of Tl, Pb, Y, La and Cu and the carbonates of Ca and Sr. The precursor materials were first reacted without the TI2O3 which was then added for a further reaction at 1060°C. The reacted material was ground and resintered under the same conditions. A small excess (5%) of TI2O3 was used because of the volatility of this material and the pellets were sealed in a gold tube under oxygen by crimping the ends. Samples were then investigated by measuring the resistivity, ac susceptibility
and heat capacity. When x or y=0 the materials are overdoped and increasing x or y results in decreasing hole concentration. Tc values were found to follow an approximately parabolic dependence upon the amount of substituted Y or rare-earth element passing through a maximum of Tc,max= 107 K when x = 0.25. The jump in heat capacity however passed through a sharp maximum when x=0. 15. This corresponds to the critical-doping point. The jump in heat capacity at the superconducting transition is directly related to the condensation energy and hence to the flux pinning. Similar results are obtained for Tlo.5Pbo.5Sr2-yLayCaCu θ7. Thus, again, properties relating to critical currents are found in these materials to maximise in the lightly overdoped region at critical doping and not at optimal doping where Tc passes through a maximum.
Claims
1. A method for preparing a high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) to maximise the critical current density (Jc) thereof, comprising the step of controlling the doping state or hole concentration of the material to be higher than the doping state or hole concentration of the material that provides a maximum superconducting transition temperature (Tc) to increase the critical current density of the material.
2. A method according to claim 1 comprising the step of controlling the doping state or hole concentration to lie at about a value where the normal-state pseudogap reduces to a minimum.
3. A method according to either of claims 1 or 2 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration p to be in the range 0. 18<p<0.20.
4. A method according to claim 3 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration p to be about 0.19.
5. A method according to claim 3 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration p to p=0.19┬▒0.005.
6. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 5 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration so that Tc for the HTSC is in the range 0.91Tc,max < Tc < 0.96Tc,max where Tc,maχ is the maximum value taken by Tc in its variation with hole concentration.
7. A method according to claim 6 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration so that Tc is in the range 0.92Tc,maχ ≤ Tc < 0.95Tc,maχ.
8. A method according to claim 6 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration so that Tc = (0.93±0.005)Tc,maχ.
9. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 8 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration p so that the room-temperature thermoelectric power Q(TRT) for the HTSC is in the range -4<Q(TRT)<- 1 where the units of Q(TRT) are ╬╝V/K, where room temperature, TRT , is in the range 280K<TRT<300K.
10. A method according to claim 9 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration p so that the thermoelectric power Q(TRT) for the HTSC is in the range - 3<Q(TRT)<-2.
11. A method according to any one of the preceding claims comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration so that the temperature derivative of the normal-state resistivity of the HTSC remains constant within ┬▒5% when the temperature is reduced from 250K down to less than 2 OK above Tc.
12. A method according to any one of the preceding claims comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration so that the temperature derivative of the normal-state constant-volume resistivity remains constant within ┬▒5% when the temperature is reduced from 500K down to less than 2 OK above Tc.
13. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 12 comprising the step of overdoping the HTSC so that the grain boundary regions between individual grains in the HTSC are doped to maximise critical current density.
14. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 13 wherein said HTSC is a Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O based HTSC.
15. A method according to claim 14 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration by partial substitution of Y, La, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb or Lu or any combination thereof for Ca, or Pb for Bi.
16. A method according to claim 14 or claim 15 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration by adjustment of the oxygen content of the HTSC.
17. A method according to claim 14 wherein said HTSC is of composition (Biι-zPbz)2+x+eSr -χ-yCaι+yCu2θ8+δ wherein 0< (e and x and ±y)<0.4, 0<z≤0.3, and 0≤δ<0.35.
18. A method according to claim 17 wherein said HTSC is of composition Bi╬╣.9Pbo.2Sr╬╣.gCa╬╣Cu ╬╕8+╬┤ and comprising the step of fixing ╬┤ by annealing the HTSC at a temperature of about (570┬▒15)┬░C in an oxygen partial pressure of about 0.1 bar or a combination of temperature and oxygen pressure or partial pressure giving an equivalent value of ╬┤.
19. A method according to claim 14 wherein said HTSC is of composition (Biι-zPbz)2+x+eSr2-χCa2Cu3Oιo+5 wherein 0<(e and x)<0.4, 0<z<0.3 and 0<δ<0.35.
20. A method according to claim 19 and comprising the step of preparing the material to incorporate a fraction of intergrowths of (Bi╬╣-zPbz)2+x+eSr2- -yCa╬╣+yCu2╬╕8+╬┤ where 0<(e and x)<0.4, 0<z<0.3, and 0<╬┤<0.35.
21. A method according to claim 20 comprising the step of causing said intergrowths to occur by partially substituting R for Ca in the HTSC where R is Y, La, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, or Lu or any combination thereof.
22. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 13 wherein said HTSC is an R-Ba-Cu-O based HTSC wherein R is Y, La, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, or Lu or any combination thereof.
23. A method according to claim 22 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration by partial substitution of Ca, Li, Na, or K or a combination thereof for R, or of Li, Na, K for Ba, or a combination thereof.
24. A method according to claim 22 or 23 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration by adjustment of the oxygen content of the HTSC.
25. A method according to claim 22 wherein said HTSC is of composition
R╬╣-xCaxBa2Cu3╬╕7-╬┤ wherein OΓëñxΓëñO.35 and 0<╬┤<0.5.
26. A method according to claim 23 wherein said HTSC is of composition Yo.8Cao.2Ba2Cu3╬╕7-╬┤ and comprising the step of fixing ╬┤ by annealing the HTSC at a temperature of about (530┬▒15)┬░C in oxygen or a combination of temperature and oxygen pressure or partial pressure giving an equivalent value of ╬┤.
27. A method according to claim 22 wherein said HTSC is of composition Rι-xLiχBa2Cu3θ -δ wherein 0<x<0.35 and 0<δ<0.5.
28. A method according to claim 22 wherein said HTSC is of composition
R2-χCaχBa4Cu7θi5-δ and 0≤x<0.35 and 0<δ<0.5.
29. A method according to claim 22 wherein said HTSC is of composition Rι-xCaχBa2Cu4θ8 wherein O. lO≤x≤O.35.
30. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 13 wherein said HTSC is a Tl-Sr-Ca-CuO based HTSC.
31. A method according to claim 30 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration by partial substitution of Y, La, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm,
Yb or Lu or any combination thereof for Ca or Sr, or Pb for Tl.
32. A method according to claim 30 or claim 31 comprising the step of controlling the hole concentration by adjustment of the oxygen content of the HTSC.
33. A method according to any one of claims 1 to 13 wherein said HTSC is an Hg based HTSC.
34. A method according to claim 33 including controlling the hole concentration by partial substitution of Y, La, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb or Lu or any combination thereof for Ca, Sr, or Ba, or Pb for Hg.
35. A method according to claim 32 or claim 33 including controlling the hole concentration by adjustment of the oxygen content of the HTSC.
36. A high temperature superconducting cuprate material prepared by the method of any one of claims 1 to 35.
37. A high temperature superconducting cuprate material (HTSC) having a doping state or hole concentration higher than the doping state or hole concentration of the material for maximum superconducting transition temperature (Tc) and at about a value where the normal-state pseudogap for the material reduces to a minimum and which maximises the critical current density (Jc) of the material.
38. An HTSC according to claim 37 in which the hole concentration p of the material is in the range 0.18<p<0.20.
39. An HTSC according to claim 38 wherein the hole concentration p is about 0.19.
40. An HTSC according to claim 38 wherein the hole concentration p=0.19┬▒0.005.
41. An HTSC according to any one of claims 37 to 40 having a Tc in the range
0.91Tc,max≤Tc≤0.96Tc,maχ where Tc,max is the maximum value taken by Tc in its variation with hole concentration.
42. An HTSC according to claim 41 wherein Tc is in the range 0.92Tc,max--Tc--0.95Tc,maχ.
43. An HTSC according to claim 41 wherein Tc = (0.93±0.005)Tc,maχ.
44. An HTSC according to any one of claims 37 to 43 wherein the room- temperature thermoelectric power Q(TRT) for the HTSC is in the range -4<Q(TRT)<- 1 where the units of Q(TRT) are ╬╝V/K, where room temperature, TRT , lies in the range 280K<TRT<300K.
45. An HTSC according to claim 44 wherein the thermoelectric power Q(TRT) for the HTSC is in the range -3<Q(TRT)<-2.
46. An HTSC according to any of claims 37 to 45 wherein the temperature derivative of the normal-state resistivity of the HTSC remains constant within ┬▒5% when the temperature is reduced from 250K down to less than 2 OK above Tc.
47. An HTSC according to any one of claims 37 to 45 wherein the temperature derivative of the normal-state constant-volume resistivity of the HTSC remains constant within ┬▒5% when the temperature is reduced from 500K down to less than 2 OK above Tc.
48. An HTSC according to any one of claims 37 to 47 which is overdoped so that the doping state or hole concentration of the material in grain boundary regions between individual grains in the HTSC is at about said value which maximises critical current density of the material.
49. An HTSC according to any one of claims 37 to 48 wherein said HTSC is a Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O based HTSC.
50. An HTSC according to claim 49 and of composition (Biι-zPbz)2+x+eSr2-x-yCaι+yCu2θ8+δ wherein 0<(e and x and ±y)<0.4, 0<z<0.3, and 0≤δ<0.35.
51. An HTSC according to claim 50 of composition Bii gPbo 2Sri 9Ca╬╣ Cu2O╬▓+╬┤-
52. An HTSC according to claim 49 of composition (Bi╬╣-zPbz)2+x+eSr2_xCa2Cu3╬╕╬╣o+╬┤ wherein 0<(e and x)<0.4 and 0<z<0.3.
53. An HTSC according to claim 52 and incorporating a fraction of intergrowths of (Bi╬╣-zPbz)2+x+eSr2-x-yCa╬╣+yCu2╬╕8+╬┤ where 0<(e and x and ┬▒y)<0.4 and OΓëñx<0.3.
54. An HTSC according to claim 53 of composition Bii sPbo 3Sr╬╣ 9Ca2Cu3╬╕╬╣o+╬┤ and said intergrowths are of composition Bii sPbo 3Sr╬╣ 9CaCu Os+╬┤.
55. An HTSC according to claim 53 of composition Bii sPbo 3sSri gCa2Cu3╬╕╬╣o+╬┤ and said intergrowths are of composition Bii sPbo 3sSr╬╣ 9CaCu2Os+╬┤.
56. An HTSC according to claim 53 of composition
Bii 73Pbo 34Sr╬╣ gCai 99CU3 cwOio+╬┤ and said intergrowths are of composition
57. An HTSC according to claim 53 of composition Bii s╬▓Pbo 23Sr╬╣ g6Ca╬╣ 95CU2 g╬▓Oio+╬┤ and said intergrowths are of composition Bii ╬▓╬▓Pbo 23Sr╬╣ g6CaCu2╬╕8+╬┤-
58. An HTSC according to claim 53 of composition Bii 84Pbo 28Sr╬╣ 3Cai 98Cu296╬╕╬╣o+╬┤ and said intergrowths are of composition Bii 84Pbo 2╬▓Sr╬╣ 93CaCu2╬╕s+╬┤-
59. An HTSC according to any one of claims 37 to 48 wherein said HTSC is an R-Ba-Cu-O based HTSC wherein R is Y, La, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, or Lu or any combination thereof.
60. An HTSC according to claim 59 of composition Rι-χCaxBa2Cu307-δ wherein 0≤x≤0.35 and 0<δ<0.5.
61. An HTSC according to claim 60 of composition Yo sCao 2Ba2Cu3╬╕7 ╬┤ wherein 0. 16<╬┤<0.24.
62. An HTSC according to claim 60 wherein ╬┤ = x ┬▒ 0.04.
63. An HTSC according to claim 59 of composition R╬╣-xLixBa2Cu3╬╕7-╬┤ wherein 0<x<0.3 and 0<╬┤<0.5.
64. An HTSC according to claim 63 wherein ╬┤ = (x/2) ┬▒ 0.04.
65. An HTSC according to claim 59 of composition R2-χCaχBa4Cu7Oi5-δ wherein 0<x<0.35 and 0<δ<0.5.
66. An HTSC according to claim 59 of composition Rι-χCaxBa2Cu Os wherein 0.1<x<0.35.
67. An HTSC according to any one of claims 37 to 48 wherein said HTSC is a Tl-Sr-Ca-Cu-O based HTSC.
68. An HTSC according to claim 67 of composition Tlo.5Pbo.5Sr2Ca╬╣_xRxCu2╬╕7 and
0.06<x<0.18.
69. An HTSC according to claim 68 wherein x = 0.12┬▒0.04.
70. An HTSC according to claim 67 of composition Tlo.5Pbo.5Sr2.xRxCaCu207 wherein R is Y, La, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, or Lu or any combination thereof, and 0.06<x<0.18.
71. An HTSC according to claim 70 wherein x = 0. 12┬▒0.04.
72. Wires, tapes, thin films, coated conductors, bulk materials or any other conductor comprising or containing the materials of claims 37 to 71.
Applications Claiming Priority (5)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
NZ33072898 | 1998-06-18 | ||
NZ33072898 | 1998-06-18 | ||
NZ33397199 | 1999-01-29 | ||
NZ33397199 | 1999-01-29 | ||
PCT/NZ1999/000095 WO1999066541A2 (en) | 1998-06-18 | 1999-06-18 | CRITICAL DOPING IN HIGH-Tc SUPERCONDUCTORS FOR MAXIMAL FLUX PINNING AND CRITICAL CURRENTS |
Publications (2)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
EP1090398A2 true EP1090398A2 (en) | 2001-04-11 |
EP1090398A4 EP1090398A4 (en) | 2007-05-02 |
Family
ID=26651922
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
EP99931620A Withdrawn EP1090398A4 (en) | 1998-06-18 | 1999-06-18 | CRITICAL DOPING IN HIGH-Tc SUPERCONDUCTORS FOR MAXIMAL FLUX PINNING AND CRITICAL CURRENTS |
Country Status (4)
Country | Link |
---|---|
EP (1) | EP1090398A4 (en) |
JP (1) | JP2002518287A (en) |
AU (1) | AU4806499A (en) |
WO (1) | WO1999066541A2 (en) |
Families Citing this family (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
EP1006594A1 (en) * | 1998-12-03 | 2000-06-07 | Jochen Dieter Prof. Dr. Mannhart | Superconductor with enhanced current density and method for making such a superconductor |
WO2010024500A1 (en) * | 2008-08-29 | 2010-03-04 | Lg Chem, Ltd. | New compound semiconductor and producing method thereof, and solar cell and thermoelectric conversion element using the same |
Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO1989006222A1 (en) * | 1987-12-30 | 1989-07-13 | Unisearch Limited | Improved method for producing ceramic superconductors |
US5619141A (en) * | 1992-04-03 | 1997-04-08 | Tallon; Jeffery L. | Thermopower mapping of superconducting cuprates |
Family Cites Families (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
JPH04114920A (en) * | 1990-08-28 | 1992-04-15 | Ind Technol Res Inst | Superconductive metal oxide t1-pb, ln-sr-cu-o composition |
US5919735A (en) * | 1994-11-04 | 1999-07-06 | Agency Of Industrial Science And Technology | High temperature superconductor |
-
1999
- 1999-06-18 AU AU48064/99A patent/AU4806499A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1999-06-18 WO PCT/NZ1999/000095 patent/WO1999066541A2/en active Application Filing
- 1999-06-18 JP JP2000555283A patent/JP2002518287A/en active Pending
- 1999-06-18 EP EP99931620A patent/EP1090398A4/en not_active Withdrawn
Patent Citations (2)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
WO1989006222A1 (en) * | 1987-12-30 | 1989-07-13 | Unisearch Limited | Improved method for producing ceramic superconductors |
US5619141A (en) * | 1992-04-03 | 1997-04-08 | Tallon; Jeffery L. | Thermopower mapping of superconducting cuprates |
Non-Patent Citations (6)
Title |
---|
FUJINAMI K ET AL: "Effect of overdoping on the irreversibility field and critical current density of the HgBa2Ca2Cu3O8+delta superconductor" PHYSICA C, NORTH-HOLLAND PUBLISHING, AMSTERDAM, NL, vol. 307, no. 3-4, October 1998 (1998-10), pages 202-208, XP004149995 ISSN: 0921-4534 * |
J.L. TALLON, G.V.M. WILLIAMS, N.E. FLOWER, C. BERNHARD: "Phase Separation, Pseudogap an Impurity Scattering in the HTS Cuprates" PHYSICA C, vol. 282-287, 1997, pages 236-239, XP004110983 * |
J.L. TALLON: "Thermoelectric Power of High-Tc Cuprates" PROCEEDINGS OF 10TH ANNIVERSARY, HTS WORKSHOP ON PHYSICS, MATERIALS AND APPLICATIONS, no. ISBN981-02-2715-9, 1996, pages 292-295, XP009110712 * |
J.W. RADCLIFFE ET AL.: "Magnetoresistance and dc magnetic susceptibility of Y0.9Ca0.1Ba2Cu3O7-[delta]" PHYSICA C, vol. 235-240, 1994, pages 1415-1416, * |
RAVEAU B ET AL: "Control of oxygen stoichiometry and creation of nuclear tracks, two important issues for optimization of superconductivity in layered copper oxides" PHYSICS AND MATERIALS SCIENCE OF HIGH TEMPERATURE SUPERCONDUCTORS II. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATO ADVANCED STUDY INSTITUTE KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBLISHERS DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS, 1992, pages 167-198, XP009077838 ISBN: 0-7923-1619-3 * |
See also references of WO9966541A2 * |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
JP2002518287A (en) | 2002-06-25 |
WO1999066541A3 (en) | 2000-04-20 |
WO1999066541A2 (en) | 1999-12-23 |
AU4806499A (en) | 2000-01-05 |
EP1090398A4 (en) | 2007-05-02 |
Similar Documents
Publication | Publication Date | Title |
---|---|---|
Wang et al. | Cationic substitution and role of oxygen in the n-type superconducting T′ system Nd 2− y Ce y CuO z | |
Takagi et al. | Superconductivity produced by electron doping in CuO 2-layered compounds | |
Yang et al. | Compounds in mixed phase CeBa 2 Cu 3 O y and TbBa 2 Cu 3 O y systems | |
Tarascon et al. | Chemical doping and physical properties of the new high temperature superconducting perovskites | |
Munakata et al. | Thermoelectric power of Bi 2 Sr 2 Ca 1− x Y x Cu 2 O 8+ y | |
Tarascon et al. | Oxygen stoichiometry and the high Tc superconducting oxides | |
Dabrowski et al. | New family of superconducting copper oxides: GaSr2Ln1− xCaxCu2O7 | |
Legros-Gledel et al. | Influence of the oxygen content on the critical temperature Tc and the thermopower of Y0. 7Ca0. 3Ba2Cu3Oz | |
Kim et al. | Three-dimensional superconducting behavior and thermodynamic parameters of Hg Ba 2 Ca 0.86 Sr 0.14 Cu 2 O 6− δ | |
EP0800494B1 (en) | LOW TEMPERATURE (T LOWER THAN 950 oC) PREPARATION OF MELT TEXTURE YBCO SUPERCONDUCTORS | |
Isawa et al. | Pb‐doping effect on irreversibility fields of HgBa2Ca2Cu3O8+ δ superconductors | |
US6784138B2 (en) | Critical doping in high-Tc superconductors for maximal flux pinning and critical currents | |
US5143895A (en) | R-ce-cu-o superconducting oxide material wherein r is at least one element selected from the group consisting of pr, nd, and sm | |
Peurla et al. | YBCO films prepared by PLD using nanocrystalline targets doped with BaZrO/sub 3/or Y211 | |
Flükiger et al. | Characterization of bulk and multifilamentary Nb3Sn and Nb3Al by diffractometric and resistive measurements | |
EP1090398A2 (en) | CRITICAL DOPING IN HIGH-Tc SUPERCONDUCTORS FOR MAXIMAL FLUX PINNING AND CRITICAL CURRENTS | |
Malozemoff et al. | High temperature superconductivity research at the IBM thomas J. Watson and Almaden research centers | |
Liu et al. | Superconductivity above 130 K in Tl1− xHgxBa2Ca2Cu3O8+ δ | |
US5214026A (en) | Method for producing a R-Ce-Cu-O superconducting material wherein R is at least one rare earth element | |
Bukowski et al. | SmBa 2 Cu 3 O 7− δ ceramics processed under oxygen pressure of 250 bar: Enhancement of intragrain superconducting properties | |
WO1997049118A2 (en) | Metallized interlayers in high-tc cuprate superconductors | |
Nomura et al. | Hole doping mechanism in bismuth cuprates | |
Masur et al. | Bi-axial texture in Ca0. 1Y0. 9Ba2Cu4O8 composite wires made by metallic precursors | |
Roul | Low-temperature magnetic and microwave studies of Gd 0.95 Ba 2 Cu 3.05 O 7− δ: Ag x composites | |
Takagi et al. | Oxygen stoichiometry and physical properties of high-Tc superconducting oxides |
Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
PUAI | Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase |
Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012 |
|
17P | Request for examination filed |
Effective date: 20010117 |
|
AK | Designated contracting states |
Kind code of ref document: A2 Designated state(s): DE FR GB IT NL |
|
A4 | Supplementary search report drawn up and despatched |
Effective date: 20070209 |
|
17Q | First examination report despatched |
Effective date: 20070807 |
|
STAA | Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent |
Free format text: STATUS: THE APPLICATION IS DEEMED TO BE WITHDRAWN |
|
18D | Application deemed to be withdrawn |
Effective date: 20090609 |