| Literature DB >> 26030255 |
T Baumgartner1, M Eisterer1, H W Weber1, R Flükiger2, C Scheuerlein2, L Bottura2.
Abstract
We report non-Cu critical current densities of 4. 09 ⋅ 10(9) A/m(2) at 12 T and 2.27 ⋅ 10(9) A/m(2) at 15 T obtained from transport measurements on a Ti-alloyed RRP Nb3Sn wire after irradiation to a fast neutron fluence of 8.9 ⋅ 10(21) m(-2). These values are to our knowledge unprecedented in multifilamentary Nb3Sn, and they correspond to a Jc enhancement of approximately 60% relative to the unirradiated state. Our magnetometry data obtained on short wire samples irradiated to fast neutron fluences of up to 2.5 ⋅ 10(22) m(-2) indicate the possibility of an even better performance, whereas earlier irradiation studies on bronze-processed Nb3Sn wires with a Sn content further from stoichiometry attested a decline of the critical current density at such high fluences. We show that radiation induced point-pinning centers rather than an increase of the upper critical field are responsible for this Jc enhancement, and argue that these results call for further research on pinning landscape engineering.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26030255 PMCID: PMC4450768 DOI: 10.1038/srep10236
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Transport critical current and corresponding non-Cu critical current density as a function of applied field, obtained before irradiation and at the two specified fast neutron fluences. The points represent the actual experimental data, the solid lines are fits.
Figure 2Relative change of Jc (4.2 K, 6T) as a function of fast neutron fluence, assessed by means of SQUID magnetometry. The squares represent the experimental data, the solid line is a moving average with error bars indicating ±3σ.
Figure 3Increase of the upper critical field of the examined wire due to fast neutron irradiation. Experimental data are displayed as points, and the solid lines are fits used to extrapolate to lower temperatures.
Figure 4Illustration of radiation induced changes in the volume pinning force. The dashed curves represent the normalized functional dependence predicted for grain boundary (GB) and for point-pinning (left scale). The solid lines show the actual volume pinning force in the unirradiated state and at the specified fluence, obtained from pinning force analyses of magnetometry data (right scale).