Publication | Closed Access
The Next Generation of Superconducting Permanent Magnets: The Flux Pumping Method
34
Citations
11
References
2009
Year
Superconducting MaterialEngineeringFlux Pumping MethodSuperconducting Permanent MagnetsMagnetismRare Earth MagnetsSuperconductivityHigh Tc SuperconductorsSuperconducting DevicesBulk YbcoElectrical EngineeringNext GenerationHigh-tc SuperconductivityPhysicsMagnetic ConfinementMagnetic MaterialRare Earth MagnetApplied PhysicsFlux PinningMagnetic PropertyMagnetic Field
Magnets made from bulk YBCO are as small and as compact as the rare earth magnets but potentially have magnetic flux densities orders of magnitude greater than those of the rare earths. In this paper a simple technique is proposed for magnetizing the superconductors. This technique involves repeatedly applying a small magnetic field which gets trapped in the superconductor and thus builds up and up. Thus a very small magnetic field such as one available from a rare earth magnet can be used to create a very large magnetic field. This technique which is applied using no moving parts is implemented by generating a traveling magnetic wave which moves across the superconductor. As it travels across the superconductor it trails flux lines behind it which get caught inside the superconductor. With each successive wave more flux lines get caught and the field builds up and up. The wave could be generated in many different ways but the preferred way is simply to heat a material whose permeability changes with temperature at its edge. As the heat travels across the material so the permeability changes and a magnetic wave is generated. It is in effect the first novel heat pump in a very long time and one which will enable the enormous potential available from these unique and highly versatile superconducting magnets to be fully realized. Within this paper we present results showing the superconductor being progressively magnetized by sequentially applied ldquoheatrdquo pulses. We also demonstrate that the sign of the magnetization is reversed if ldquocoldrdquo pulses are applied instead of heat pulses. These experimental results are supported by modeling.
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