Critical temperature Tc, the temperature below which the wire becomes a superconductor
Critical current density Jc, the maximum current a superconducting wire can carry per unit cross-sectional area.
Superconducting wires/tapes/cables usually consist of two key features:
The superconducting compound
A conduction stabilizer, which carries the current in case of the loss of superconductivity in the superconductoring material.
The current sharing temperature Tcs is the temperature at which the current transported through the superconductor also starts to flow through the stabilizer. However, Tcs is not the same as the quench temperature Tc; in the former case, there is partial loss of superconductivity, while in the latter case, the superconductivity is entirely lost.
LTS wire
Low-temperature superconductor wires are made from superconductors with low critical temperature, such as Nb3Sn and NbTi . Often the superconductor is in filament form in a copper or aluminium matrix which carries the current should the superconductor quench for any reason. The superconductor filaments can form a third of the total volume of the wire.
Preparation
Wire drawing
The normal wire drawing process can be used for malleable alloys such as niobium-titanium.
Surface diffusion
can be prepared by surface diffusion where the high temperature component as a solid is bathed in the other element as liquid or gas. When all components remain in the solid state during high temperature diffusion this is known as the bronze process.
The powder-in-tube process is an extrusion process often used for making electrical conductors from brittle superconducting materials such as niobium-tin or magnesium diboride, and ceramic cuprate superconductors such as BSCCO. It has been used to form wires of the iron pnictides. This process is used because the high-temperature superconductors are too brittle for normal wire forming processes. The tubes are metal, often silver. Often the tubes are heated to react the mix of powders. Once reacted the tubes are sometimes flattened to form a tape-like conductor. The resulting wire is not as flexible as conventional metal wire, but is sufficient for many applications. There are in situ and ex situ variants of the process, as well a 'double core' method that combines both.
Coated superconductor tape or wire
The coated superconductor tapes are known as second generation superconductor wires. These wires are in a form of a metal tape of about 10 mm width and about 100 micrometer thickness, coated with superconductor materials such as YBCO. A few years after the discovery of High-temperature superconductivity materials such as the YBCO, it was demonstrated that epitaxial YBCO thin films grown on lattice matched single crystals such as magnesium oxideMgO, strontium titanate and sapphire had high supercritical current densities of 10–40 kA/mm2. However, a lattice-matched flexible material was needed for producing a long tape. YBCO films deposited directly on metal substrate materials exhibit poor superconducting properties. It was demonstrated that a c-axis oriented yttria-stabilized zirconia intermediate layer on a metal substrate can yield YBCO films of higher quality, which had still one to two orders less critical current density than that produced on the single crystal substrates. The breakthrough came with the invention of ion beam-assisted deposition technique to produce of biaxially aligned yttria-stabilized zirconia thin films on metal tapes. The biaxial YSZ film acted as a lattice matched buffer layer for the epitaxial growth of the YBCO films on it. These YBCO films achieved critical current density of more than 1 MA/cm2. Other buffer layers such as cerium oxide were produced using the IBAD technique for the superconductor films. Smooth substrates with roughness in the order of 1 nm are essential for the high quality superconductor films. Initially hastelloy substrates were electro polished to create a smoothed surface. Hastelloy is a nickel based alloy capable of withstanding temperatures up to 800C without melting or heavily oxidizing. Currently a coating technique known as "spin on glass" or "solution deposition planarization" is used to smooth the substrate surface. Recently YBCO coated superconductor tapes capable of carrying more than 500 A/cm-width at 77 K and 1000 A/cm-width at 30 K under high magnetic field have been demonstrated.
HPCVD can be used for thin-film magnesium diboride.
Reactive co-evaporation
Superconducting layer in the 2nd generation superconducting wires can be grown by reactive co-evaporation of constituent metals, rare-earth element, barium, and copper.
Standards
There are several IEC standards related to superconducting wires under TC90.