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High-temperature superconductors (HTS) could enable high-field magnets much stronger than is possible with Nb-Ti and Nb3Sn, but two key limiting factors have so far been the difficulty of achieving high critical current density in long-length conductors, especially in high-current cables, and the danger of quenches out of the superconducting into the normal state. Here we demonstrate stable, reliable and training-quench-free performance of Bi-2212 racetrack coils wound with a 17-strand Rutherford cable fabricated from wires made with nanospray Bi-2212 powder. These multifilament wires are now being delivered in single lengths of more than 1 km with a new record whole-wire critical current density up to 950 A/mm2 at 30 T at 4.2 K. These coils carried up to 8.6 kA while generating a peak field of 3.5 T at 4.2 K, at a wire current density of 1020 A/mm2. Quite different from the unpredictable training performance of Nb-Ti and Nb3Sn magnets, these Bi-2212 magnets showed no training quenches and entered the flux flow state in a stable manner before thermal runaway and quench occurred. Also quite different from Nb-Ti, Nb3Sn, and REBCO magnets for which localized thermal runaways occur at unpredictable locations, the quenches of Bi-2212 magnets consistently occurred in the high field regions over a conductor length greater than one meter. These characteristics make quench detection rather simple, enabling safe protection, and suggest a new paradigm of constructing quench-predictable superconducting magnets from Bi-2212, which is, like Nb-Ti and Nb3Sn, isotropic, round, multifilament, uniform over km lengths and suitable for Rutherford cable use but, unlike them, much more tolerant of the energy disturbances that often lead Nb-based superconducting magnets to premature quench and long training cycles.
Bi-2212 round wire is made by the powder-in-tube technique. An unavoidable property of powder-in-tube conductors is that there is about 30% void space in the as-drawn wire. We have recently shown that the gas present in the as-drawn Bi-2212 wire aggl
It is well known that longer Bi-2212 conductors have significantly lower critical current density (Jc) than shorter ones, and recently it has become clear that a major cause of this reduction is internal gas pressure generated during heat treatment,
We present results of Raman scattering experiments in differently doped Bi-2212 single crystals. Below Tc the spectra show pair-breaking features in the whole doping range. The low frequency power laws confirm the existence of a $d_{x^2-y^2}$-wave or
Recently the interest about Bi-2212 round wire superconductor for high magnetic field use has been enhancing despite the fact that an increase of the critical current is still needed to boost its successful use in such applications. Recent studies ha
We report measurements of AC susceptibility and hence the in-plane London penetration depth on the same samples of Bi:2212 and Bi(Y):2212 for many values of the planar hole concentration/CuO2 unit (p). These support the scenario in which the pseudoga