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Testing of Surface Mounted Superconducting Stacks as Trapped-Flux Magnets in a Synchronous Machine

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Stacks of high-temperature superconducting tapes may offer a technically affordable solution for the application of superconducting materials as trapped-flux magnets in the rotor of synchronous electrical machines. Nevertheless, several concerns… Click to show full abstract

Stacks of high-temperature superconducting tapes may offer a technically affordable solution for the application of superconducting materials as trapped-flux magnets in the rotor of synchronous electrical machines. Nevertheless, several concerns must be first addressed, among others, the optimal procedure to induce the current vortexes previously to operation (magnetization), the survivability of these vortexes in the electromagnetic environment present in an electrical machine and the accuracy of recently developed numerical models. With the aim of exploring such practicalities, this article presents a modified synchronous machine to test under liquid nitrogen conditions thin stacks of superconducting tapes. The machine is run under realistic conditions: currents in the stacks are induced from the stator, then the shaft is rotated, and finally, the machine is connected to a load, working as a generator. The results confirm previous numerical and experimental studies and establish a procedure for assessing the behavior of stacks in their actual operational environment.

Keywords: trapped flux; flux magnets; machine; surface mounted; synchronous machine; testing surface

Journal Title: IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity
Year Published: 2020

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