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Effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wires

We analyzed the effects of A-15 phase inhomogeneities, in particular Sn concentration gradients, on the pinning force scaling behavior of Nb$_3$Sn wires. This was accomplished using a software code capable of simulating both magnetization and transport measurements on wires containing sub-elements w...

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Autores principales: Baumgartner, Thomas, Pfeiffer, S, Bernardi, Johannes, Ballarino, A, Eisterer, Michael
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6668/aac87e
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2644288
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author Baumgartner, Thomas
Pfeiffer, S
Bernardi, Johannes
Ballarino, A
Eisterer, Michael
author_facet Baumgartner, Thomas
Pfeiffer, S
Bernardi, Johannes
Ballarino, A
Eisterer, Michael
author_sort Baumgartner, Thomas
collection CERN
description We analyzed the effects of A-15 phase inhomogeneities, in particular Sn concentration gradients, on the pinning force scaling behavior of Nb$_3$Sn wires. This was accomplished using a software code capable of simulating both magnetization and transport measurements on wires containing sub-elements with an arbitrary (e.g. modeled after EDX data) Sn concentration profile. We demonstrate that certain experimentally observed deviations from the ideal scaling behavior, in particular large values of the high-field scaling exponent $q$ and the zero-temperature scaling field $B^*_{c2}(0)$ are caused by gradients in stoichiometry. In the presence of such gradients the scaling analysis results depend on the field and temperature ranges covered by the input data, and we discuss the stronger influence of inhomogeneities on magnetometry-based results. Our simulation code was benchmarked by attempting to mimic the scaling behavior of a Ti-alloyed Restack Rod Process wire observed in magnetometry experiments with a field limit of 7 T. By comparison to transport data obtained in fields of up to 15 T, we found that the simulations provide a significantly better high-field $J_c(B)$ prediction compared to an extrapolation based on conventional scaling.
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language eng
publishDate 2018
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spelling oai-inspirehep.net-16797592019-10-15T15:19:52Zdoi:10.1088/1361-6668/aac87ehttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2644288engBaumgartner, ThomasPfeiffer, SBernardi, JohannesBallarino, AEisterer, MichaelEffects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wiresAccelerators and Storage RingsWe analyzed the effects of A-15 phase inhomogeneities, in particular Sn concentration gradients, on the pinning force scaling behavior of Nb$_3$Sn wires. This was accomplished using a software code capable of simulating both magnetization and transport measurements on wires containing sub-elements with an arbitrary (e.g. modeled after EDX data) Sn concentration profile. We demonstrate that certain experimentally observed deviations from the ideal scaling behavior, in particular large values of the high-field scaling exponent $q$ and the zero-temperature scaling field $B^*_{c2}(0)$ are caused by gradients in stoichiometry. In the presence of such gradients the scaling analysis results depend on the field and temperature ranges covered by the input data, and we discuss the stronger influence of inhomogeneities on magnetometry-based results. Our simulation code was benchmarked by attempting to mimic the scaling behavior of a Ti-alloyed Restack Rod Process wire observed in magnetometry experiments with a field limit of 7 T. By comparison to transport data obtained in fields of up to 15 T, we found that the simulations provide a significantly better high-field $J_c(B)$ prediction compared to an extrapolation based on conventional scaling.We analyzed the effects of A-15 phase inhomogeneities, in particular Sn concentration gradients, on the pinning force scaling behavior of Nb3Sn wires. This was accomplished using a software code capable of simulating both magnetization and transport measurements on wires containing sub-elements with an arbitrary (e.g. modeled after EDX data) Sn concentration profile. We demonstrate that certain experimentally observed deviations from the ideal scaling behavior, in particular large values of the high-field scaling exponent q and the zero-temperature scaling field ${B}_{{\rm{c}}2}^{* }(0)$ are caused by gradients in stoichiometry. In the presence of such gradients the scaling analysis results depend on the field and temperature ranges covered by the input data, and we discuss the stronger influence of inhomogeneities on magnetometry-based results. Our simulation code was benchmarked by attempting to mimic the scaling behavior of a Ti-alloyed Restack Rod Process wire observed in magnetometry experiments with a field limit of 7 T. By comparison to transport data obtained in fields of up to 15 T, we found that the simulations provide a significantly better high-field J c(B) prediction compared to an extrapolation based on conventional scaling.oai:inspirehep.net:16797592018
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Baumgartner, Thomas
Pfeiffer, S
Bernardi, Johannes
Ballarino, A
Eisterer, Michael
Effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wires
title Effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wires
title_full Effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wires
title_fullStr Effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wires
title_full_unstemmed Effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wires
title_short Effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in Nb$_3$Sn wires
title_sort effects of inhomogeneities on pinning force scaling in nb$_3$sn wires
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6668/aac87e
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2644288
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AT bernardijohannes effectsofinhomogeneitiesonpinningforcescalinginnb3snwires
AT ballarinoa effectsofinhomogeneitiesonpinningforcescalinginnb3snwires
AT eisterermichael effectsofinhomogeneitiesonpinningforcescalinginnb3snwires