•Sonja Schlachter, Bing Liu, Bernhard Obst, Silke Zimmer, Johann Reiner
und Wilfried Goldacker
Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe, Institut für Technische Physik, P.O.
Box 3640, 76021 Karlsruhe, Germany
Two years after the discovery of superconductivity in MgB2, wires and tapes with high current carrying capability have been developed by various groups. One method for preparing powder-in-tube (PIT) wires and tapes is the ex-situ method which uses prereacted MgB2 as precursor. In contrast, the in-situ method starts with a mixture of Mg and B which is reacted within the sheath in a heat treatment after the deformation process. Despite the high current carrying capability the microstructure of the wires and tapes is often very inhomogeneous and in transport current measurements they tend to quench at low magnetic fields much below the critical current values determined from magnetization measurements.
In this paper we present measurements of Tc and the critical
current density Jc of ex-situ PIT wires and of in-situ PIT wires
with different Mg/B precursor ratio as a function of the magnetic field.
Astonishingly, in-situ wires with a Mg/B precursor ratio below the stoichiometric
value 1/2 show higher critical current densities than wires with stoichiometric
Mg/B precursor ratio being a result of the incomplete penetration of boron
grains by Mg during the heat treatment. Although the microstructure of
these in-situ wires is still very inhomogeneous, Jc(B) values
are even higher than Jc(B) values of ex-situ PIT MgB2
wires with a much more homogeneous microstructure.