WB5-11

Comparative Study of the Effect of Nano Activated Charcoal and Diamond on the Performance of MgB2 Bulk Superconductor

Dec.2 15:45-16:00 (Tokyo Time)

*J. Longji Dadiel1, Pavan K. N Sugali2,3, Naomichi Sakai1, Hiraku Ogino1,2,3, Taichiro Nishio2,3, Kazuya Yokoyama4, Tetsuo Oka1, Masato Murakami1

Shibaura Institute of Technology, Tokyo, Japan1

National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, Tsukuba, Japan2

Tokyo University of Science, Japan3

Ashikaga University Tochigi, Japan4

In the present work we investigated effect of selective sources of carbon (C) addition on bulk MgB2 produced by in-situ solid-state reaction in Ar atmosphere. The superconducting performance of MgB2 bulk with nano-scale charcoal and diamond additions were investigated and compared. Activated charcoal which was natural sourced from mahogany and pre-treated obtaining ~60 nm size and diamond particles of 10 nm size were employed with different doping levels (0 to 0.8 wt%). X-Ray diffraction results indicated that the C doped samples showed slight decrease in the a- lattice parameters. Microstructural observation by FE-SEM and EPMA indicated the presence of precipitated particles in the bulk matrix along with the grain boundary as a consequence of C doping which was also observed in the slight degradation of critical temperatures, Tc. The critical current density, Jc at self-field and 20 K of 0.8 wt% doped charcoal is ~455 kA/cm2 and 0.8 wt% doped nano-diamond particles are ~480kA/cm2.  The enhancement of the Jc was observed in all doped samples as compared to the undoped sample at 20 K. Nano-diamond doping was observed to be most affective due to the effective nano inclusions in the bulk material. Flux pinning force density supports the effective enhancement in the Jc performance compared to the pure MgB2 sample with doped ones. Our work clarified that the presence of C-related impurity in the matrix is a useful inter-grain inclusion for effective flux pinning, hence responsible for the improvement in the Jc.

Keywords: Activated charcoal, Nanodiamond, Critical current density, Scanning electron microscopy