M.H. Davey, V.Y. Lee, et al.
Journal of Organic Chemistry
An aerosol flow reactor operating at 900-1000°C is used to prepare high-purity Y1Ba2Cu3O7 powders with a uniform chemical composition and a submicron to micron average particle size by thermally decomposing aerosol droplets of a solution consisting of the nitrate salts of Y, Ba, and Cu in a 1:2:3 ratio. The powders were at least 99% reacted based on thermogravimetric analysis, and the x-ray diffraction pattern is essentially that of Y1Ba2Cu3O7. Magnetic susceptibility measurements showed the powders to be superconducting with a transition at 90 K even for average reactor residence times as short as 20 s. Sintering cold-pressed pellets between 900 and 1000°C provides dense, fine grained (average size on the order of 1 μm) superconducting ceramics with sharp 90 K transitions. The grain size and shape of a final sintered part could be varied depending on powder production, processing, and sintering conditions.
M.H. Davey, V.Y. Lee, et al.
Journal of Organic Chemistry
D.C. Bullock, G. Gorman, et al.
Physica C: Superconductivity and its applications
F. You, R.J. Twieg, et al.
Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals Science and Technology Section A: Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals
H. Schwenk, S.S.P. Parkin, et al.
Physical Review B