Many possible applications of this and related high temperature superconducting materials have been discussed. For example, superconducting materials are finding use as
magnets in
magnetic resonance imaging,
magnetic levitation, and
Josephson junctions. (The most used material for power cables and magnets is
BSCCO.) YBCO has yet to be used in many applications involving superconductors for two primary reasons: • First, although single crystals of YBCO have a very high critical current density,
polycrystals have a very low critical
current density: only a small current can be passed while maintaining superconductivity. This problem is due to crystal
grain boundaries in the material. When the grain boundary angle is greater than about 5°, the supercurrent cannot cross the boundary. The grain boundary problem can be controlled to some extent by preparing thin films via
CVD or by texturing the material to align the grain boundaries. • A second problem limiting the use of this material in technological applications is associated with processing of the material. Oxide materials such as this are brittle, and forming them into
superconducting wires by any conventional process does not produce a useful superconductor. (Unlike
BSCCO, the
powder-in-tube process does not give good results with YBCO.) The most promising method developed to utilize this material involves deposition of YBCO on flexible metal tapes coated with buffering metal oxides. This is known as . Texture (crystal plane alignment) can be introduced into the metal tape (the RABiTS process) or a textured ceramic buffer layer can be deposited, with the aid of an ion beam, on an untextured alloy substrate (the
IBAD process). Subsequent oxide layers prevent diffusion of the metal from the tape into the superconductor while transferring the template for texturing the superconducting layer. Novel variants on CVD, PVD, and solution deposition techniques are used to produce long lengths of the final YBCO layer at high rates. Companies pursuing these processes include
American Superconductor, Superpower (a division of
Furukawa Electric),
Sumitomo,
Fujikura,
Nexans Superconductors,
Commonwealth Fusion Systems, and European Advanced Superconductors. A much larger number of research institutes have also produced YBCO tape by these methods. The superconducting tape is used for
SPARC, a
tokamak fusion reactor design. ==Surface modification==