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Thermally actuated magnetization flux pump in single-grain YBCO bulk
25
Citations
8
References
2009
Year
Superconducting MaterialHigh Temperature SuperconductorsEngineeringMagnetic ResonanceMagnetismMagnetization Flux PumpSuperconductivityHigh Tc SuperconductorsMagnetohydrodynamicsSuperconducting DevicesMaterials ScienceHigh-tc SuperconductivityPhysicsYbco MagnetizationHeat TransferMagnetic MaterialNiobium-based SuperconductorsSpintronicsHigh-temperature SuperconductivityCryogenicsApplied PhysicsCondensed Matter PhysicsMagnetic PropertyMagnetic DeviceThermal EngineeringYbco Bulk
Recent progress in material processing has proved that high temperature superconductors (HTS) have a great potential to trap large magnetic fields at cryogenic temperatures. For example, HTS are widely used in MRI scanners and in magnetic bearings. However, using traditional ways to magnetize, the YBCO will always need the applied field to be as high as the expected field on the superconductor or much higher than it, leading to a much higher cost than that of using permanent magnets. In this paper, we find a method of YBCO magnetization in liquid nitrogen that only requires the applied field to be at the level of a permanent magnet. Moreover, rather than applying a pulsed high current field on the YBCO, we use a thermally actuated material (gadolinium) as an intermedia and create a travelling magnetic field through it by changing the partial temperature so that the partial permeability is changed to build up the magnetization of the YBCO gradually after multiple pumps. The gadolinium bulk is located between the YBCO and the permanent magnet and is heated and cooled repeatedly from the outer surface to generate a travelling thermal wave inwards. In the subsequent experiment, an obvious accumulation of the flux density is detected on the surface of the YBCO bulk.
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