Title :
Levitation force of a YBaCuO bulk high temperature superconductor over a NdFeB guideway
Author :
Wang, J.S. ; Wang, S.Y. ; Ren, Z.Y. ; Zhu, M. ; Jiang, H. ; Tang, Q.X.
Author_Institution :
Appl. Supercond. Lab., Southwest Jiaotong Univ., Sichuan, China
fDate :
3/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
One of the prospective applications of YBaCuO bulk high temperature superconductors (HTS) is for superconducting magnetic levitation (Maglev) vehicles. The levitation force of a single permanent magnet over a single superconducting YBaCuO bulk has been researched, but this is not enough for practical Maglev vehicles. In this paper, properties of the levitation force of a YBaCuO bulk HTS over a NdFeB guideway are investigated. The magnetic field at the guideway surface is up to 1.2 T. During the experiment, bulk YBaCuO is placed in a columnar liquid nitrogen vessel, whose bottom thickness is only 3.5 mm, and it is over the guideway. The YBaCuO is cooled in a zero magnetic field with liquid nitrogen and can move up and down at different velocities. The measurement process is fully controlled by a computer. In this case, there is a 103.4 N levitation force at a 5 mm gap between the YBaCuO (diameter=30 mm, thickness=14 mm) sample and the NdFeB guideway. In addition, the authors compare the levitation force over the NdFeB guideway with that over a single cylindrical NdFeB permanent magnet
Keywords :
barium compounds; copper compounds; high-temperature superconductors; magnetic fields; magnetic forces; magnetic levitation; permanent magnets; superconducting magnets; yttrium compounds; 14 mm; 3.5 mm; 30 mm; 5 mm; Maglev vehicles; NdFeB; NdFeB guideway; YBaCuO; YBaCuO bulk high temperature superconductor; guideway surface magnetic field; levitation force; superconducting magnetic levitation; High temperature superconductors; Magnetic field measurement; Magnetic fields; Magnetic levitation; Magnetic liquids; Nitrogen; Permanent magnets; Superconducting magnets; Vehicles; Yttrium barium copper oxide;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on