Bismuth strontium calcium copper oxide

A piece of cuprate of bismuth and strontium: this piece is a cube with an edge of nearly 1 mm.

Bismuth strontium calcium copper oxide (BSCCO, pronounced bisko), is a type of cuprate superconductor having the generalized chemical formula Bi2Sr2Can−1CunO2n+4+x, with n = 2 being the most commonly studied compound (though n = 1 and n = 3 have also received significant attention). Discovered as a general class in 1988,[1] BSCCO was the first high-temperature superconductor which did not contain a rare-earth element.

It is a cuprate superconductor, an important category of high-temperature superconductors sharing a two-dimensional layered (perovskite) structure (see figure at right) with superconductivity taking place in a copper-oxide plane. BSCCO and YBCO are the most studied cuprate superconductors.

Specific types of BSCCO are usually referred to using the sequence of the numbers of the metallic ions. Thus Bi-2201 is the n = 1 compound (Bi2Sr2CuO6+x), Bi-2212 is the n = 2 compound (Bi2Sr2CaCu2O8+x), and Bi-2223 is the n = 3 compound (Bi2Sr2Ca2Cu3O10+x).

The BSCCO family is analogous to a thallium family of high-temperature superconductors referred to as TBCCO and having the general formula Tl2Ba2Can−1CunO2n+4+x, and a mercury family HBCCO of formula HgBa2Can−1CunO2n+2+x. There are a number of other variants of these superconducting families. In general, their critical temperature at which they become superconducting rises for the first few members and then falls. Thus Bi-2201 has Tc ≈ 33 K, Bi-2212 has Tc ≈ 96 K, Bi-2223 has Tc ≈ 108 K, and Bi-2234 has Tc ≈ 104 K. This last member is very difficult to synthesize.

Wires and tapes

For practical applications, BSCCO is compressed with silver metal into tape by the powder-in-tube process

BSCCO was the first HTS material to be used for making practical superconducting wires. All HTS have an extremely short coherence length, of the order of 1.6 nm. This means that the grains in a polycrystalline wire must be in extremely good contact – they must be atomically smooth. Further, because the superconductivity resides substantially only in the copper-oxygen planes, the grains must be crystallographically aligned. BSCCO is therefore a good candidate because its grains can be aligned either by melt processing or by mechanical deformation. The double bismuth-oxide layer is only weakly bonded by van der Waals forces. So like graphite or mica, deformation causes slip on these BiO planes, and grains tend to deform into aligned plates. Further, because BSCCO has n = 1, 2 and 3 members, these naturally tend to accommodate low angle grain boundaries, so that indeed they remain atomically smooth. Thus, first-generation HTS wires (referred to as 1G) have been manufactured for many years now by companies such as American Superconductor Corporation (AMSC) in the USA and Sumitomo in Japan, though AMSC has now abandoned BSCCO wire in favour of 2G wire based on YBCO. [citation needed]

Typically, precursor powders are packed into a silver tube, which is then extruded down in diameter. These are then repacked as multiple tubes in a silver tube and again extruded down in diameter, then drawn down further in size and rolled into a flat tape. The last step ensures grain alignment. The tapes are then reacted at high temperature to form dense, crystallographically aligned Bi-2223 multifilamentary conducting tape suitable for winding cables or coils for transformers, magnets, motors and generators.[2][3] Typical tapes of 4 mm width and 0.2 mm thickness support a current of 200 A at 77 K, giving a critical current density in the Bi-2223 filaments of 5 kA/mm2. This rises markedly with decreasing temperature so that many applications are implemented at 30–35 K, even though Tc is 108 K.

Applications

Electrical power transmission :

Electromagnets and their current leads :

Discovery

BSCCO as a new class of superconductor was discovered around 1988 by Hiroshi Maeda and colleagues[1] at the National Research Institute for Metals in Japan, though at the time they were unable to determine its precise composition and structure. Almost immediately several groups, and most notably Subramanian[5] et al. at Dupont and Cava[6] et al. at AT&T Bell Labs, identified Bi-2212. The n = 3 member proved quite elusive and was not identified until a month or so later by Tallon[7] et al. in a government research lab in New Zealand. There have been only minor improvements to these materials since. A key early development was to replace about 15% of the Bi by Pb, which greatly accelerated the formation and quality of Bi-2223.

The crystal unit cell of BSCCO-2212, comprising two repeat units offset by (1/2,0,0). The other BSCCO family members have very similar structures: 2201 has one less CuO2 in its top and bottom half and no Ca layer, while 2223 has an extra CuO2 and Ca layer in each half.

Properties

BSCCO needs to be hole-doped by an excess of oxygen atoms (x in the formula) in order to superconduct. As in all high-temperature superconductors (HTS) Tc is sensitive to the exact doping level: the maximal Tc for Bi-2212 (as for most HTS) is achieved with an excess of about 0.16 holes per Cu atom.[8][9] This is referred to as optimal doping. Samples with lower doping (and hence lower Tc) are generally referred to as underdoped, while those with excess doping (also lower Tc) are overdoped. By changing the oxygen content, Tc can thus be altered at will. By many measures,[clarification needed] overdoped HTS are strong superconductors, even if their Tc is less than optimal, but underdoped HTS become extremely weak.[citation needed]

The application of external pressure generally raises Tc in underdoped samples to values that well exceed the maximum at ambient pressure. This is not fully understood, though a secondary effect is that pressure increases the doping. Bi-2223 is complicated in that it has three distinct copper-oxygen planes. The two outer copper-oxygen layers are typically close to optimal doping, while the remaining inner layer is markedly underdoped. Thus the application of pressure in Bi-2223 results in Tc rising to a maximum of about 123 K due to optimization of the two outer planes. Following an extended decline, Tc then rises again towards 140 K due to optimization of the inner plane. A key challenge therefore is to determine how to optimize all copper-oxygen layers simultaneously.

BSCCO is a Type-II superconductor. The upper critical field Hc2 in Bi-2212 polycrystalline samples at 4.2 K has been measured as 200 ± 25 T (cf 168 ± 26 T for YBCO polycrystalline samples).[10] In practice, HTS are limited by the irreversibility field H*, above which magnetic vortices melt or decouple. Even though BSCCO has a higher upper critical field than YBCO it has a much lower H* (typically smaller by a factor of 100)[11] thus limiting its use for making high-field magnets. It is for this reason that conductors of YBCO are preferred to BSCCO, though they are much more difficult to fabricate.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b H. Maeda; Y. Tanaka; M. Fukutumi & T. Asano (1988). "A New High-Tc Oxide Superconductor without a Rare Earth Element". Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 27 (2): L209–L210. Bibcode:1988JaJAP..27L.209M. doi:10.1143/JJAP.27.L209.
  2. ^ C. L. Briant; E. L. Hall; K. W. Lay; I. E. Tkaczyk (1994). "Microstructural evolution of the BSCCO-2223 during powder-in-tube processing". J. Mater. Res. 9 (11): 2789–2808. Bibcode:1994JMatR...9.2789B. doi:10.1557/JMR.1994.2789. S2CID 135525314.
  3. ^ Timothy P. Beales; Jo Jutson; Luc Le Lay & Michelé Mölgg (1997). "Comparison of the powder-in-tube processing properties of two (Bi2−xPbx)Sr2Ca2Cu3O10+δpowders". J. Mater. Chem. 7 (4): 653–659. doi:10.1039/a606896k.
  4. ^ "HTS materials for LHC current leads". November 23, 2005. Archived from the original on June 7, 2024. Retrieved August 19, 2024.
  5. ^ M. A. Subramanian; et al. (1988). "A new high-temperature superconductor: Bi2Sr3−xCaxCu2O8+y". Science. 239 (4843): 1015–1017. Bibcode:1988Sci...239.1015S. doi:10.1126/science.239.4843.1015. PMID 17815702. S2CID 35551648.
  6. ^ R. J. Cava; et al. (1988). "Structure and physical properties of single crystals of the 84-K superconductor Bi2.2Sr2Ca0.8Cu2O8+δ". Physical Review B. 38 (1): 893–896. Bibcode:1988PhRvB..38..893S. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.38.893. PMID 9945287.
  7. ^ J. L. Tallon; et al. (1988). "High-Tc superconducting phases in the series Bi2.1(Ca,Sr)n+1CunO2n+4+δ". Nature. 333 (6169): 153–156. Bibcode:1988Natur.333..153T. doi:10.1038/333153a0. S2CID 4348096.
  8. ^ M. R. Presland; et al. (1991). "General trends in oxygen stoichiometry effects in Bi and Tl superconductors". Physica C. 176 (1–3): 95. Bibcode:1991PhyC..176...95P. doi:10.1016/0921-4534(91)90700-9.
  9. ^ J. L. Tallon; et al. (1995). "Generic Superconducting Phase Behaviour in High-Tc Cuprates: Tc variation with hole concentration in YBa2Cu3O7−δ". Physical Review B. 51 (18): (R)12911–4. Bibcode:1995PhRvB..5112911T. doi:10.1103/PhysRevB.51.12911. PMID 9978087.
  10. ^ A. I. Golovashkin; et al. (1991). "Low temperature direct measurements of Hc2 in HTSC using megagauss magnetic fields". Physica C: Superconductivity. 185–189: 1859–1860. Bibcode:1991PhyC..185.1859G. doi:10.1016/0921-4534(91)91055-9.
  11. ^ K. Togano; et al. (1988). "Properties of Pb-doped Bi-Sr-Ca-Cu-O superconductors". Applied Physics Letters. 53 (14): 1329–1331. Bibcode:1988ApPhL..53.1329T. doi:10.1063/1.100452.

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