Breakthrough in the ultrafast growth of superconducting films with high performances (PRESS REALISE)

  • The new low-cost, environmentally friendly and scalable method, designed by ICMAB-CSIC researchers, represents a breakthrough in the production of superconducting materials
  • transient liquid phase is formed with the new precursors, from which the superconducting films grow at speeds of 100 nm/s
  • This method is fully compatible with the incorporation of nanoparticles into the superconductor structure, essential for high magnetic field applications in wind generators, electric aviation or particle accelerators

Superconducting materials exhibit zero electrical resistance to the flow of current. Large-scale manufacturing, at a low cost and following an environmentally friendly procedure, while achieving high performances, is crucial to make them economically viable and competitive in today’s market.

As the structure of the superconducting material can be affected by many factors (temperature and pressure of the process, composition of the precursors…), the synthesis process has to be well controlled. The quest for a continuous manufacturing method to obtain superconducting films that can be applied in high magnetic field areas is one of the biggest challenges in this sector.

Now, the Superconducting Materials research group (SUMAN) at the Institute of Materials Science of Barcelona (ICMAB-CSIC), led by Prof. Teresa Puig, in collaboration with researchers from the University of Girona, the Autonomous University of Barcelona, and the SOLEIL Synchrotron, has been able to produce superconducting films with an ultrafast and controlled growth process. The YBCO (copper, barium and yttrium oxide) superconducting films grow at a speed of 100 nm/s in a simplified, low-cost and scalable method.

“Our process is up to 100 times faster than currently existing processes” affirms Prof. Teresa Puig, principal investigator of the European Research Council (ERC) Advanced Grant ULTRASUPERTAPE, framework of this study. “The new process represents a breakthrough and an inflection point in the synthesis of superconducting films” continues Puig.

The process, much more simplified, and uses environmentally friendly precursors, with no fluoride, in comparison to standard methods of chemical solution deposition. In addition, they allow the formation of a transient liquid phase that, at the right pressure and temperature conditions, allow the ultrafast growth of the desired superconducting films.

The study, published in Nature Communications, includes the in situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction and high-resolution electron microscopy, which allowed researchers to understand key aspects of the ultrafast growth process. “In situ synchrotron measurements, taken while the superconducting film was being formed, have been crucial to understand the growth process mechanism and see that it is really ultrafast” says Prof. Teresa Puig.

In addition, “we show for the first time that nanoparticles can be incorporated into the superconductor structure to form the superconducting nanocomposites at 100 nm/s” indicates Puig. These nanocomposites are essential for the material to remain superconducting in applications in high magnetic fields, such as in renewable energy applications (wind generators, fusion reactors), transport (electric aviation), or magnets for high-energy physics applications (particle accelerators).

Prof. Teresa Puig, Principal Investigator of the study published in Nature Communications

Prof. Teresa Puig recently obtained a Proof-of-Concept project from the European Research Council (ERC) to study the industrial and technological feasibility of this process, which may allow producing large-scale superconducting films of interest for the aforementioned applications in an economically viable way.

Reference Article:

Ultrafast transient liquid assisted growth of high corrent density superconducting films. L. Soler, J. Jareño, J. Banchewski, S. Rasi, N. Chamorro, R. Guzman, R. Yáñez, C. Mocuta, S. Ricart, J. Farjas, P. Roura-Grabulosa, X. Obradors, T. Puig. Nature Communications 11, 344 (2020) doi:10.1038/s41467-019-13791-1. Published: 17 Jan 2020.

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