Evidence for length-dependent wire expansion, filament dedensification and consequent degradation of critical current density in Ag-alloy sheathed Bi-2212 wires
A Malagoli, P J Lee, A K Ghosh, C Scheuerlein, M Di Michiel, J Jiang,, U P Trociewitz, E E Hellstrom, D C Larbalestier

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that internal gas pressure during heat treatment causes length-dependent wire expansion and filament dedensification in Ag-alloy sheathed Bi-2212 wires, leading to significant critical current density degradation.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis linking internal gas pressure to wire expansion, filament dedensification, and Jc reduction, emphasizing the importance of controlling internal pressure during processing.
Findings
Longer wires show increased diameter expansion and damage.
Melting during heat treatment significantly increases internal pressure.
Jc decreases by over 50% where wire expansion occurs.
Abstract
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, which expands the wire diameter and dedensifies the Bi-2212 filaments. Here we report on the length-dependent expansion of 5 to 240 cm lengths of state-of-the-art, commercial Ag alloy-sheathed Bi-2212 wire after full and some partial heat treatments. Detailed image analysis along the wire length shows that the wire diameter increases with distance from the ends, longer samples often showing evident damage and leaks provoked by the internal gas pressure. Comparison of heat treatments carried out just below the melting point and with the usual melt process makes it clear that melting is crucial to developing high internal pressure. The decay…
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