PDQIE - PDQ Industrial Electric
High-Temperature Superconductors (high-Tc,
HTS)
USES FOR SUPERCONDUCTORS
Magnetic-levitation is an application where superconductors perform extremely well. Transport
vehicles such as trains can be made to "float" on strong superconducting magnets, virtually eliminating friction
between the train and its tracks. Not only would conventional electromagnets waste much of the electrical energy as
heat, they would have to be physically much larger than superconducting magnets. A landmark for the commercial use
of MAGLEV technology occurred in 1990 when it gained the status of a nationally-funded project in Japan. The
Minister of Transport authorized construction of the Yamanashi Maglev Test Line which opened on April 3, 1997. In
December 2003, the MLX01 test vehicle (shown above) attained an incredible speed of 361 mph (581 kph).
Although the technology has now been proven, the wider use of MAGLEV vehicles has been constrained
by political and environmental concerns (strong magnetic fields can create a bio-hazard). The world's first MAGLEV
train to be adopted into commercial service, a shuttle in Birmingham, England, shut down in 1997 after operating
for 11 years. A Sino-German maglev is currently operating over a 30-km course at Pudong International Airport in
Shanghai, China. The U.S. plans to put its first (non-superconducting) Maglev train into operation on a Virginia
college campus. Click this link for a website that lists other uses for MAGLEV.
MRI of a human skull.
An area where superconductors can perform a life-saving function is in the field of biomagnetism.
Doctors need a non-invasive means of determining what's going on inside the human body. By impinging a strong
superconductor-derived magnetic field into the body, hydrogen atoms that exist in the body's water and fat
molecules are forced to accept energy from the magnetic field. They then release this energy at a frequency that
can be detected and displayed graphically by a computer. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) was actually discovered
in the mid 1940's. But, the first MRI exam on a human being was not performed until July 3, 1977. And, it took
almost five hours to produce one image! Today's faster computers process the data in much less time. A tutorial is
available on MRI at this link. Or read the latest MRI news at this link.
The Korean Superconductivity Group within KRISS has carried biomagnetic technology a step further
with the development of a double-relaxation oscillation SQUID (Superconducting QUantum Interference Device) for use
in Magnetoencephalography. SQUID's are capable of sensing a change in a magnetic field over a billion times weaker
than the force that moves the needle on a compass (compass: 5e-5T, SQUID: e-14T.). With this technology, the body
can be probed to certain depths without the need for the strong magnetic fields associated with MRI's.
Probably the one event, more than any other, that has been responsible for putting
"superconductors" into the American lexicon was the Superconducting Super-Collider project planned for construction
in Ellis county, Texas. Though Congress cancelled the multi-billion dollar effort in 1993, the concept of such a
large, high-energy collider would never have been viable without superconductors. High-energy particle research
hinges on being able to accelerate sub-atomic particles to nearly the speed of light. Superconductor magnets make
this possible. CERN, a consortium of several European nations, is doing something similar with its Large Hadron
Collider (LHC) recently inaugurated along the Franco-Swiss border.
Other related web sites worth visiting include the proton-antiproton collider page at Fermilab.
This was the first facility to use superconducting magnets. Get information on the electron-proton collider HERA at
the German lab pages of DESY (with English text). And Brookhaven National Laboratory features a page dedicated to
its RHIC heavy-ion collider.
Electric generators made with superconducting wire are far more efficient than conventional
generators wound with copper wire. In fact, their efficiency is above 99% and their size about half that of
conventional generators. These facts make them very lucrative ventures for power utilities. General Electric has
estimated the potential worldwide market for superconducting generators in the next decade at around $20-30 billion
dollars. Late in 2002 GE Power Systems received $12.3 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Energy to move
high-temperature superconducting generator technology toward full commercialization. To read the latest news on
superconducting generators click Here.
Other commercial power projects in the works that employ superconductor technology include energy
storage to enhance power stability. American Superconductor Corp. received an order from Alliant Energy in late
March 2000 to install a Distributed Superconducting Magnetic Energy Storage System (D-SMES) in Wisconsin. Just one
of these 6 D-SMES units has a power reserve of over 3 million watts, which can be retrieved whenever there is a
need to stabilize line voltage during a disturbance in the power grid. AMSC has also installed more than 22 of its
D-VAR systems to provide instantaneous reactive power support.
The General Atomics/Intermagnetics General superconducting
Fault Current Controller, employing HTS superconductors.
Recently, power utilities have also begun to use superconductor-based transformers and "fault
limiters". The Swiss-Swedish company ABB was the first to connect a superconducting transformer to a utility power
network in March of 1997. ABB also recently announced the development of a 6.4MVA (mega-volt-ampere) fault current
limiter - the most powerful in the world. This new generation of HTS superconducting fault limiters is being called
upon due to their ability to respond in just thousandths of a second to limit tens of thousands of amperes of
current. Advanced Ceramics Limited is another of several companies that makes BSCCO type fault limiters.
Intermagnetics General recently completed tests on its largest (15kv class) power-utility-size fault limiter at a
Southern California Edison (SCE) substation near Norwalk, California. And, both the US and Japan have plans to
replace underground copper power cables with superconducting BSCCO cable-in-conduit cooled with liquid nitrogen.
(See photo below.) By doing this, more current can be routed through existing cable tunnels. In one instance 250
pounds of superconducting wire replaced 18,000 pounds of vintage copper wire, making it over 7000% more
space-efficient.
An idealized application for superconductors is to employ them in the transmission of commercial
power to cities. However, due to the high cost and impracticality of cooling miles of superconducting wire to
cryogenic temperatures, this has only happened with short "test runs". In May of 2001 some 150,000 residents of
Copenhagen, Denmark, began receiving their electricity through HTS (high-temperature superconducting) material.
That cable was only 30 meters long, but proved adequate for testing purposes. In the summer of 2001 Pirelli
completed installation of three 400-foot HTS cables for Detroit Edison at the Frisbie Substation capable of
delivering 100 million watts of power. This marked the first time commercial power has been delivered to customers
of a US power utility through superconducting wire. Intermagnetics General has announced that its IGC-SuperPower
subsidiary has joined with BOC and Sumitomo Electric in a $26 million project to install an underground, HTS power
cable in Albany, New York, in Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation's power grid. Sumitomo Electric's DI-BSCCO cable was
employed in the first in-grid power cable demonstration project sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy and New
York Energy Research & Development Authority. After connecting to the grid successfully on July 2006, the
DI-BSCCO cable has been supplying the power to approximately 70,000 households without any problems. The long-term
test will be completed in the 2007-2008 timeframe.
Hypres Superconducting Microchip,
Incorporating 6000 Josephson Junctions.
The National Science Foundation, along with NASA and DARPA and various universities, are currently
researching "petaflop" computers. A petaflop is a thousand-trillion floating point operations per second. Today's
fastest computers have reached "petaflop" speeds - quadrillions of operations per second. Currently the fastest is
China’s Tianhe-1A, operating at 2.67 petaflops per second. The fastest single processor is a Lenslet optical DSP
running at 8 teraflops. It has been conjectured that devices on the order of 50 nanometers in size along with
unconventional switching mechanisms, such as the Josephson junctions associated with superconductors, will be
necessary to achieve the next level of processing speeds. TRW researchers (now Northrop Grumman) have quantified
this further by predicting that 100 billion Josephson junctions on 4000 microprocessors will be necessary to reach
32 petabits per second. These Josephson junctions are incorporated into field-effect transistors which then become
part of the logic circuits within the processors. Recently it was demonstrated at the Weizmann Institute in Israel
that the tiny magnetic fields that penetrate Type 2 superconductors can be used for storing and retrieving digital
information. It is, however, not a foregone conclusion that computers of the future will be built around
superconducting devices. Competing technologies, such as quantum (DELTT) transistors, high-density molecule-scale
processors , and DNA-based processing also have the potential to achieve petaflop benchmarks.
In the electronics industry, ultra-high-performance filters are now being built. Since
superconducting wire has near zero resistance, even at high frequencies, many more filter stages can be employed to
achive a desired frequency response. This translates into an ability to pass desired frequencies and block
undesirable frequencies in high-congestion rf (radio frequency) applications such as cellular telephone systems.
ISCO International and Superconductor Technologies are companies currently offering such filters.
Superconductors have also found widespread applications in the military. HTSC SQUIDS are being used
by the U.S. NAVY to detect mines and submarines. And, significantly smaller motors are being built for NAVY ships
using superconducting wire and "tape". In mid-July, 2001, American Superconductor unveiled a 5000-horsepower motor
made with superconducting wire (below). An even larger 36.5MW HTS ship propulsion motor was delivered to the U.S.
Navy in late 2006
The newest application for HTS wire is in the degaussing of naval
vessels. American Superconductor has announced the development of a superconducting degaussing cable. Degaussing of
a ship's hull eliminates residual magnetic fields which might otherwise give away a ship's presence. In addition to
reduced power requirements, HTS degaussing cable offers reduced size and weight.
The military is also looking at using superconductive tape as a
means of reducing the length of very low frequency antennas employed on submarines. Normally, the lower the
frequency, the longer an antenna must be. However, inserting a coil of wire ahead of the antenna will make it
function as if it were much longer. Unfortunately, this loading coil also increases system losses by adding the
resistance in the coil's wire. Using superconductive materials can significantly reduce losses in this coil. The
Electronic Materials and Devices Research Group at University of Birmingham (UK) is credited with creating the
first superconducting microwave antenna. Applications engineers suggest that superconducting carbon nanotubes might
be an ideal nano-antenna for high-gigahertz and terahertz frequencies, once a method of achieving zero "on tube"
contact resistance is perfected.
The most ignominious military use of superconductors may come with the deployment of "E-bombs".
These are devices that make use of strong, superconductor-derived magnetic fields to create a fast, high-intensity
electro-magnetic pulse (EMP) to disable an enemy's electronic equipment. Such a device saw its first use in wartime
in March 2003 when US Forces attacked an Iraqi broadcast facility.
A photo of Comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3, in the act of disintegrating,
taken with the European Space Agency S-CAM.
Among emerging technologies are a stabilizing momentum wheel (gyroscope) for earth-orbiting
satellites that employs the "flux-pinning" properties of imperfect superconductors to reduce friction to near zero.
Superconducting x-ray detectors and ultra-fast, superconducting light detectors are being developed due to their
inherent ability to detect extremely weak amounts of energy. Already Scientists at the European Space Agency (ESA)
have developed what's being called the S-Cam, an optical camera of phenomenal sensitivity (see above photo). And,
superconductors may even play a role in Internet communications soon. In late February, 2000, Irvine Sensors
Corporation received a $1 million contract to research and develop a superconducting digital router for high-speed
data communications up to 160 Ghz. Since Internet traffic is increasing exponentially, superconductor technology
may be called upon to meet this super need. Irvine Sensors speculates this router may see use in facilitating
Internet2.
According to June 2002 estimates by the Conectus consortium, the
worldwide market for superconductor products is projected to grow to near US $38 billion by 2020. Low-temperature
superconductors are expected to continue to play a dominant role in well-established fields such as MRI and
scientific research, with high-temperature superconductors enabling newer applications. The above ISIS graph gives
a rough breakdown of the various markets in which superconductors are expected to make a contribution.
All of this is, of course, contingent upon a linear growth rate. Should new superconductors with
higher transition temperatures be discovered, growth and development in this exciting field could explode virtually
overnight.
Another impetus to the wider use of superconductors is political in nature. The reduction of green-house gas (GHG)
emissions has becoming a topical issue due to the Kyoto Protocol which requires the European Union (EU) to reduce
its emissions by 8% from 1990 levels by 2012. Physicists in Finland have calculated that the EU could reduce carbon
dioxide emissions by up to 53 million tons if high-temperature superconductors were used in power plants.
The future melding of superconductors into our daily lives will also depend to a great degree on
advancements in the field of cryogenic cooling. New, high-efficiency magnetocaloric-effect compounds such as
gadolinium-silicon-germanium are expected to enter the marketplace soon. Such materials should make possible
compact, refrigeration units to facilitate additional HTS applications.
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