Abstract

The use of high temperature superconducting materials (HTS) in various applications, requires knowledge of their critical parameters like critical current, critical magnetic field and critical temperature, in DC applications like high magnetic field generators, superconducting magnetic energy storage system (SMES), magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), magnets for particle accelerators, SC Maglev trains and other applications. Also, these parameters are important for specific properties in alternating current applications like fault current limiters, transformers, generators, motors, and power transmission lines. An important characteristic that needs to be tucked into consideration for AC applications is the power losses that occur in the HTS superconducting materials, which limits the maximum performance that the superconducting materials can attain for these applications. In order to measure these characteristics, which depend on the type of material used, but also on the temperature and other parameters, it is necessary to use an appropriate setup device that allows both obtaining the working temperature range (4.2 K to 300 K and other necessary parameters like high vacuum 10-6 mbar, high current supply (500 A), high magnetic field measurement system (1-10 T), etc. For the cryogenic cooling of the entire system, a closed cycle Gifford-McMahon type cryocooler is used, with two cooling stages, stage I at 50 K and second stage at 4.2 K (liquid Helium temperature). The set-up system used for measurement of the parameters of HTS superconducting materials (YBCO, BSCCO or MgB2) and the various coils made with them, is described in this article together with its functional parameters and some experimental results obtained by testing an YBCO coils system. The maximum generated magnetic flux density was 5 T in the centre of the coils system.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call