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Observation of a non-uniform current distribution in stacked high temperature superconducting tapes
Author(s) -
T. A. J. Meulenbroeks,
Y. Terazaki,
Shinnosuke Matsunaga,
N. Yanagi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of physics. conference series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.21
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1742-6596
pISSN - 1742-6588
DOI - 10.1088/1742-6596/1293/1/012065
Subject(s) - conductor , electrical conductor , current (fluid) , superconductivity , stack (abstract data type) , electric field , critical current , materials science , high temperature superconductivity , electric current , condensed matter physics , field (mathematics) , voltage , mechanics , engineering physics , nuclear engineering , electrical engineering , computer science , physics , composite material , engineering , mathematics , quantum mechanics , pure mathematics , programming language
High Temperature Superconductors (HTS) improve upon low temperature superconductors in many ways and the ability to cope with a non-uniform current distribution might be one of those improvements. To put this to the test, an experimental setup is designed to force a non-uniform current upon a stack of 5 HTS tapes, using a worst case current feeding method. The experiment can help determine the potential of this conductor design and is part of the ongoing effort to develop a non-transposed stacked HTS conductor for the nuclear fusion reactor FFHR. The results clearly show that the conductor sample is able to stably conduct a current equal to its critical current, although at an elevated electric field of roughly 5 mV/m. This means non-transposed stacked tape conductors remain stable, even if a worst case nonuniform current is constantly forced upon them. A hypothesis to explain this abnormally high electric field is formulated on the basis of the results, however additional research is needed to verify it. It states that the electric field is necessary for the tapes to share current and would mean that in a properly engineered application, these losses due to the electric field, would only occur during start-up. Overall it is clear that this experiment proves the excellent stability of non-transposed stacked HTS tapes and their ability to conduct a non-uniform current.

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