Title :
Preparation and Properties of Si Doped
Using Silica Sol-Gel and Carbon Chemical Vapor Coated Boron
Author :
Paolella, M. ; Bavykin, D. ; Young, E.A.
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Cryogenics, Univ. of Southampton, Southampton, UK
Abstract :
Coating a precursor nano powder by depositing a thin layer of dopant can achieve a controllable homogeneous distribution of the dopant per nano grain. Previously, we have shown that a simple, scalable chemical vapor deposition method is capable of achieving a uniform deposition of carbon onto boron powder, since the dopant is evenly distributed on each precursor grain. In this paper, we implement a new technique using a sol-gel method (using tetraethyl orthosilicate as a precursor) to coat silica on nano-sized boron powder. The silica-coated boron is also subsequently coated with carbon using the technique detailed previously. Both silica-coated and silica+carbon coated powders are reacted with magnesium using the in situ process. Analysis using transmission electron microscopy, powder X-ray diffraction and the field and temperature-dependence of critical current density is used to evaluate the effectiveness and homogeneity of this method.
Keywords :
X-ray diffraction; carbon; chemical vapour deposition; critical current density (superconductivity); magnesium compounds; magnetisation; nanofabrication; nanoparticles; silicon; sol-gel processing; transmission electron microscopy; type II superconductors; Mg(B1-xCx)2:Si; XRD; carbon chemical vapor coated boron; critical current density; dopant thin layer; homogeneity; magnetization; nanopowder; powder X-ray diffraction; silica sol-gel method; silicon doped magnesium diboride; temperature dependence; transmission electron microscopy; Boron; Carbon; Critical current density; Doping; Powders; Silicon carbide; Critical current density; magnesium diboride; magnetization measurements; x-ray diffraction (XRD);
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2013.2245176