Observation of high-Tc superconductivity in inhomogeneous combinatorial ceramics
Mitra Iranmanesh, Nikolai D. Zhigadlo, Thanaporn Tohsophon, John R., Kirtley, Wilfried Assenmacher, Werner Mader, J\"urg Hulliger

TL;DR
This study demonstrates a novel synthetic method for high-Tc superconductivity in inhomogeneous ceramic samples, revealing local superconducting regions up to 118 K without traditional high-pressure techniques.
Contribution
It introduces a combinatorial ceramic synthesis approach that produces high-Tc superconductivity in compounds lacking Bi, Tl, Hg, or high-pressure conditions, with local superconducting areas identified.
Findings
High-Tc up to 118 K observed in inhomogeneous samples.
Local superconducting regions of a few microns confirmed by scanning SQUID microscopy.
Different grain sizes influence phase composition and superconducting properties.
Abstract
A single-sample synthesis concept based on multi-element ceramic samples can produce a variety of local products. When applied to cuprate superconductors (SC), statistical modelling predicts the occurrence of possible compounds in a concentration range of about 50 ppm. In samples with such low concentrations, determining which compositions are superconducting is a challenging task and requires local probes or separation techniques. Here, we report results from samples with seven components: BaO2, CaCO3, SrCO3, La2O3, PbCO3, ZrO2 and CuO oxides and carbonates, starting from different grain sizes. The reacted ceramics show different phases, particular grain growth, as well as variations in homogeneity and superconducting properties. High-Tc superconductivity up to 118 K was found. Powder x-ray diffraction (XRD) in combination with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS), scanning…
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