Thermal strain-induced enhancement of electromagnetic properties in SiC-MgB2 composites
R. Zeng S.X. Dou, L. Lu, W. X. Li, J.H. Kim, P. Munroe, R.K. Zheng and, S.P. Ringer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that residual thermal strain in SiC-MgB2 composites significantly enhances superconducting properties like critical current density and upper critical field, offering a new approach to material property manipulation.
Contribution
It reveals that thermal strain from lattice mismatch can improve superconducting properties in bulk composites, expanding strain engineering beyond thin films.
Findings
Thermal strain improves Jc, Hirr, and Hc2 in SiC-MgB2 composites.
Low carbon substitution maintains Tc with significant property enhancements.
Residual thermal stress offers a new method for material property optimization.
Abstract
Strain engineering has been used to modify materials properties in ferroelectric, superconducting, and ferromagnetic thin films. The advantage of strain engineering is that it can achieve unexpected enhancement in certain properties, such as an increase in ferroelectric critical temperature, Tc, by 300 to 500K, with a minimum detrimental effect on the intrinsic properties of the material. The strain engineering has been largely applied to the materials in thin film form, where the strain is generated as a result of lattice mismatch between the substrate and component film or between layers in multilayer structures. Here, we report the observation of residual thermal stress/strain in dense SiC-MgB2 superconductor composites prepared by a diffusion method. We demonstrate that the thermal strain caused by the different thermal expansion coefficients between the MgB2 and SiC phases is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuperconductivity in MgB2 and Alloys · Advanced ceramic materials synthesis · Aluminum Alloys Composites Properties
