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Dive into the research topics where E. E. Hellstrom is active.

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Featured researches published by E. E. Hellstrom.


Nature | 2001

Strongly linked current flow in polycrystalline forms of the superconductor MgB2.

D. C. Larbalestier; L. D. Cooley; M.O. Rikel; A. Polyanskii; Jiming Jiang; S. Patnaik; X. Y. Cai; D.M. Feldmann; A. Gurevich; A. A. Squitieri; M. T. Naus; Chang-Beom Eom; E. E. Hellstrom; R. J. Cava; K. A. Regan; N. Rogado; M. A. Hayward; T. He; Joanna Slusky; P. Khalifah; K. Inumaru; M. Haas

The discovery of superconductivity at 39 K in magnesium diboride, MgB2, raises many issues, a critical one being whether this material resembles a high-temperature copper oxide superconductor or a low-temperature metallic superconductor in terms of its behaviour in strong magnetic fields. Although the copper oxides exhibit very high transition temperatures, their in-field performance is compromized by their large anisotropy, the result of which is to restrict high bulk current densities to a region much less than the full magnetic-field–temperature (H–T) space over which superconductivity is found. Moreover, the weak coupling across grain boundaries makes transport current densities in untextured polycrystalline samples low and strongly sensitive to magnetic field. Here we report that, despite the multiphase, untextured, microscale, subdivided nature of our MgB2 samples, supercurrents flow throughout the material without exhibiting strong sensitivity to weak magnetic fields. Our combined magnetization, magneto-optical, microscopy and X-ray investigations show that the supercurrent density is mostly determined by flux pinning, rather than by the grain boundary connectivity. Our results therefore suggest that this new superconductor class is not compromized by weak-link problems, a conclusion of significance for practical applications if higher temperature analogues of this compound can be discovered.


arXiv: Superconductivity | 2001

Thin Film Magnesium Boride Superconductor with Very High Critical Current Density and Enhanced Irreversibility Field

Chang-Beom Eom; M. K. Lee; J. Choi; L. Belenky; Xueyan Song; L. D. Cooley; M. T. Naus; S. Patnaik; Jiming Jiang; M.O. Rikel; A. Polyanskii; A. Gurevich; X. Y. Cai; Sang Don Bu; S.E. Babcock; E. E. Hellstrom; D. C. Larbalestier; N. Rogado; K. A. Regan; M. A. Hayward; T. He; Joanna Slusky; K. Inumaru; M. K. Haas; R. J. Cava

Larbalestier †§ N. Rogado*, K.A. Regan*, M.A. Hayward*, T. He*, J.S. Slusky*, K. Inumaru*, M.K. Haas* and R.J. Cava* † Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Univer-sity of Wisconsin, 1509 University Avenue, Madison, WI 53706 USA § Applied Superconductivity Center, University of Wisconsin, 1500 Engineering Drive, Madison, WI 53706 USA * Department of Chemistry and Princeton Materials Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544 USA


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2004

Very high upper critical fields in MgB2 produced by selective tuning of impurity scattering

A. Gurevich; S. Patnaik; Valeria Braccini; K H Kim; C. H. Mielke; Xueyan Song; L. D. Cooley; Sang Don Bu; D. M. Kim; J. Choi; Land J. Belenky; J. E. Giencke; M. K. Lee; Wei-Cheng Tian; X. Q. Pan; A Siri; E. E. Hellstrom; Chang-Beom Eom; D. C. Larbalestier

We report a significant enhancement of the upper critical field Hc2 of different MgB2 samples alloyed with nonmagnetic impurities. By studying films and bulk polycrystals with different resistivities ρ ,w e sho wac lear trend of a ni ncrease in Hc2 as ρ increases. One particular high resistivity film had a zero-temperature Hc2(0) well above the Hc2 values of competing non-cuprate superconductors such as Nb3Sn and Nb–Ti. Our high-field transport measurements give record values H ⊥ c2 (0) ≈ 34 T and H || c2 (0) ≈ 49 T for high resistivity films and Hc2(0) ≈ 29 T for untextured bulk polycrystals. The highest Hc2 film also exhibits a significant upward curvature of Hc2(T ) and a temperature dependence of the anisotropy parameter γ( T ) = H || c2 /H ⊥ c2 opposite to that of single crystals: γ( T ) decreases as the temperature decreases, from γ( Tc) ≈ 2t o γ( 0) ≈ 1.5. This remarkable Hc2 enhancement and its anomalous temperature dependence are a consequence of the two-gap superconductivity in MgB2 ,w hich offers special opportunities for further Hc2 increases by tuning of the impurity scattering by selective alloying on Mg and B sites. Our experimental results can be explained by a theory of two-gap superconductivity in the dirty limit. The very high values of Hc2(T ) observed suggest that MgB2 can be made into a versatile, competitive high-field superconductor.


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2014

A trapped field of 17.6 T in melt-processed, bulk Gd-Ba-Cu-O reinforced with shrink-fit steel

John Hay Durrell; Anthony R. Dennis; J. Jaroszynski; Mark Douglas Ainslie; Kysen G Palmer; Yunhua Shi; A.M. Campbell; John R. Hull; M. Strasik; E. E. Hellstrom; D.A. Cardwell

The ability of large-grain (RE)Ba2Cu3O7−δ ((RE)BCO; RE = rare earth) bulk superconductors to trap magnetic fields is determined by their critical current. With high trapped fields, however, bulk samples are subject to a relatively large Lorentz force, and their performance is limited primarily by their tensile strength. Consequently, sample reinforcement is the key to performance improvement in these technologically important materials. In this work, we report a trapped field of 17.6 T, the largest reported to date, in a stack of two silver-doped GdBCO superconducting bulk samples, each 25 mm in diameter, fabricated by top-seeded melt growth and reinforced with shrink-fit stainless steel. This sample preparation technique has the advantage of being relatively straightforward and inexpensive to implement, and offers the prospect of easy access to portable, high magnetic fields without any requirement for a sustaining current source.


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2010

New Fe-based superconductors: properties relevant for applications

M. Putti; I. Pallecchi; E. Bellingeri; M.R. Cimberle; M Tropeano; C. Ferdeghini; A. Palenzona; C. Tarantini; Akiyasu Yamamoto; J. Jiang; J. Jaroszynski; F Kametani; D Abraimov; A. Polyanskii; J. D. Weiss; E. E. Hellstrom; A. Gurevich; D. C. Larbalestier; Rongying Jin; Brian C. Sales; Athena S. Sefat; Michael A. McGuire; David Mandrus; Peng Cheng; Ying Jia; H. H. Wen; S. Lee; Chang-Beom Eom

Less than two years after the discovery of high temperature superconductivity in oxypnictide LaFeAs(O, F) several families of superconductors based on Fe layers (1111, 122, 11, 111) are available. They share several characteristics with cuprate superconductors that compromise easy applications, such as the layered structure, the small coherence length and unconventional pairing. On the other hand, the Fe-based superconductors have metallic parent compounds and their electronic anisotropy is generally smaller and does not strongly depend on the level of doping, and the supposed order parameter symmetry is s-wave, thus in principle not so detrimental to current transmission across grain boundaries. From the application point of view, the main efforts are still devoted to investigate the superconducting properties, to distinguish intrinsic from extrinsic behaviors and to compare the different families in order to identify which one is the fittest for the quest for better and more practical superconductors. The 1111 family shows the highest Tc, huge but also the most anisotropic upper critical field and in-field, fan-shaped resistive transitions reminiscent of those of cuprates. On the other hand, the 122 family is much less anisotropic with sharper resistive transitions as in low temperature superconductors, but with about half the Tc of the 1111 compounds. An overview of the main superconducting properties relevant to applications will be presented. Upper critical field, electronic anisotropy parameter, and intragranular and intergranular critical current density will be discussed and compared, where possible, across the Fe-based superconductor families.


Nature Materials | 2014

Isotropic round-wire multifilament cuprate superconductor for generation of magnetic fields above 30 T

D. C. Larbalestier; J. Jiang; U.P. Trociewitz; F Kametani; Christian Scheuerlein; Matthieu Dalban-Canassy; M Matras; Peng Chen; N Craig; P. J. Lee; E. E. Hellstrom

Magnets are the principal market for superconductors, but making attractive conductors out of the high-temperature cuprate superconductors (HTSs) has proved difficult because of the presence of high-angle grain boundaries that are generally believed to lower the critical current density, J(c). To minimize such grain boundary obstacles, HTS conductors such as REBa2Cu3O(7-x) and (Bi, Pb)2Sr2Ca2Cu3O(10-x) are both made as tapes with a high aspect ratio and a large superconducting anisotropy. Here we report that Bi2Sr2CaCu2O(8-x) (Bi-2212) can be made in the much more desirable isotropic, round-wire, multifilament form that can be wound or cabled into arbitrary geometries and will be especially valuable for high-field NMR magnets beyond the present 1 GHz proton resonance limit of Nb3Sn technology. An appealing attribute of this Bi-2212 conductor is that, being without macroscopic texture, it contains many high-angle grain boundaries but nevertheless attains a very high J(c) of 2,500 A mm(-2) at 20 T and 4.2 K. The large potential of the conductor has been demonstrated by building a small coil that generated almost 2.6 T in a 31 T background field. This demonstration that grain boundary limits to high Jc can be practically overcome underlines the value of a renewed focus on grain boundary properties in non-ideal geometries.


Applied Physics Letters | 2005

Improved upper critical field in bulk-form magnesium diboride by mechanical alloying with carbon

B. J. Senkowicz; J. E. Giencke; S. Patnaik; Chang-Beom Eom; E. E. Hellstrom; D. C. Larbalestier

High-energy milling of magnesium diboride (MgB2) prereacted powder renders the material largely amorphous through extreme mechanical deformation and is suitable for mechanically alloying MgB2 with dopants including carbon. Bulk samples of milled carbon and MgB2 powders subjected to hot isostatic pressing and Mg vapor annealing have achieved upper critical fields in excess of 32T and critical current density approaching 106A∕cm2.


Superconductor Science and Technology | 2001

Electronic anisotropy, magnetic field-temperature phase diagram and their dependence on resistivity in c-axis oriented MgB2 thin films

S. Patnaik; L. D. Cooley; A. Gurevich; A. Polyanskii; Jiming Jiang; X. Y. Cai; A. A. Squitieri; M. T. Naus; M. K. Lee; J. Choi; Land J. Belenky; Sang Don Bu; J Letteri; Xueyan Song; D. G. Schlom; S.E. Babcock; Chang-Beom Eom; E. E. Hellstrom; D. C. Larbalestier

An important predicted, but so far uncharacterized, property of the new superconductor MgB2 is electronic anisotropy arising from its layered crystal structure. Here we report on three c-axis oriented thin films, showing that the upper critical field anisotropy ratio Hc2?/Hc2? is 1.8 to 2.0, the ratio increasing with higher resistivity. Measurements of the magnetic field-temperature phase diagram show that flux pinning disappears at H*?0.8Hc2?(T) in untextured samples. Hc2?(0) is strongly enhanced by alloying to 39 T for the highest resistivity film, more than twice that seen in bulk samples.


Nature Materials | 2010

Template engineering of Co-doped BaFe2As2 single-crystal thin films

S. Lee; J. Jiang; Y. Zhang; C. W. Bark; J. D. Weiss; C. Tarantini; C. T. Nelson; Ho Won Jang; C. M. Folkman; Seung-Hyub Baek; Anatolii Polyanskii; D. Abraimov; A. Yamamoto; Jeongpil Park; Xiaoqing Pan; E. E. Hellstrom; D. C. Larbalestier; Chang-Beom Eom

Understanding new superconductors requires high-quality epitaxial thin films to explore intrinsic electromagnetic properties and evaluate device applications. So far, superconducting properties of ferropnictide thin films seem compromised by imperfect epitaxial growth and poor connectivity of the superconducting phase. Here we report new template engineering using single-crystal intermediate layers of (001) SrTiO(3) and BaTiO(3) grown on various perovskite substrates that enables genuine epitaxial films of Co-doped BaFe(2)As(2) with a high transition temperature (T(c,rho=0) of 21.5 K, where rho=resistivity), a small transition width (DeltaT(c)=1.3 K), a superior critical current density J(c) of 4.5 MA cm(-2) (4.2 K) and strong c-axis flux pinning. Implementing SrTiO(3) or BaTiO(3) templates to match the alkaline-earth layer in the Ba-122 with the alkaline-earth/oxygen layer in the templates opens new avenues for epitaxial growth of ferropnictides on multifunctional single-crystal substrates. Beyond superconductors, it provides a framework for growing heteroepitaxial intermetallic compounds on various substrates by matching interfacial layers between templates and thin-film overlayers.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2010

High Field Magnets With HTS Conductors

H.W. Weijers; U.P. Trociewitz; W. D. Markiewicz; J. Jiang; D. Myers; E. E. Hellstrom; Aixia Xu; J. Jaroszynski; Patrick D. Noyes; Y. Viouchkov; D. C. Larbalestier

Development of high-field magnets using high temperature superconductors (HTS) is a core activity at the NHMFL. Magnet technology based on both YBCO-coated tape conductors and Bi-2212 round wires is being pursued. Two specific projects are underway. The first is a user magnet with a 17 T YBCO coil set which, inside an LTS outsert, will generate a combined field of 32 T. The second is a 7 T Bi2212 demonstration coil set to be operated in a large bore resistive magnet to generate a combined magnetic field of 25 T. Owing to the substantial technological differences of the two conductor types, each project faces different conductor and magnet technology challenges. Two small coils have been tested in a 38-mm cold bore cryostat inserted in a 31 T resistive magnet: a Bi2212 round-wire layer-wound insert coil that generated 1.1 T for a total of 32.1 T and a YBCO double-pancake insert that generated 2.8 T for a total central field of 33.8 T. Four larger layer-wound coils have been manufactured and tested in a 20 T, 186-mm cold bore resistive magnet: a sizeable Bi-2212 coil and three thin large-diameter YBCO coils. The test results are discussed. The current densities and stress levels that these coils tolerate underpin our conviction that >30 T all-superconducting magnets are viable.

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J. Jiang

Florida State University

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J. D. Weiss

Florida State University

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F Kametani

Florida State University

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A. Polyanskii

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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C. Tarantini

Florida State University

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Chang-Beom Eom

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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W. Zhang

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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S. Lee

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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