Abstract
Ion irradiation of REBCO films and coated conductors, in which the ions pass completely through the REBCO film, produces damage tracks which form near-ideal flux-pinning defects. The radius and aspect ratio of the tracks depends on the mass and energy of the incident ions. We have investigated the effect of Ag ion irradiation, at different incident energies and incidence angles, on REBCO production-quality coated conductors from American Superconductor Corp. Transmission electron microscopy and in-field transport critical current anisotropy analysis indicates that the ion-energy threshold for the formation of elongated tracks is around 50 MeV. At this energy tracks are not readily identifiable in low-resolution TEM, and enhancement of critical current is nearly isotropic. For a higher ion energy of 100 MeV, on the other hand, clear elongated (but still not fully continuous) tracks are visible in TEM, and the critical current is anisotropic with strong enhancement occurring when the applied field is parallel to the ion incidence angle. We particularly analyze the case of 60° inclined irradiation. This produces a clear peak in the field-angle dependence of critical current for 100 MeV irradiation, but only an incipient peak for 50 MeV irradiation. The incipient peak can be identified by curve fitting using a minimal number of maximum-entropy functional components.
Original language | English |
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Journal | IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity |
Volume | 32 |
Issue number | 4 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jun 2022 |