Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNeil Bradford Modified over 8 years ago
1
HIGH TEMPERATURE SUPERCONDUCTORS
2
INTRODUCTION Superconducitivity Beginning of HTS
3
Historical Background Kamerlingh Onnes, Dutch physicist in 1911 Meissner and Ochsenfeld Niobium nitride-16k, in 1941 Vanadium-silicon-17.5k in 1953 First commercial superconducting wire- NbTI,in 1962
4
Historical background BCS Theory in 1957 by Bardeen, Cooper and Schrieffer Josephson Effect in1962 Organic superconductors in 1964 HTS in 1986 by Muller & Bednorz Yr,Ba,Cu,O compound- 90k in 1987 Latest ceramic superconductor,Tc=138k, compound of Hg,Ta,Ba,Ca,Cu,O
5
Conventional superconductor LTS, follows BCS theory Al, Hg, Mo, Nb, Pb
6
Unconventional Superconductors Mainly artificially made superconductors Cant be explained by BCS theory HTS like La based cuprate perovskite, Mg diboride etc.
7
Meissner Effect By Walther Meissner & Robert Ochsenfeld At superconducting temperature materials become perfectly dia magnetic & cancels all flux entering inside or the process of excluding the magnetic field Working principle of high speed magnetic trains
8
Meissner effect
9
Levitating magnet
10
Perovskite A rare mineral on the earth crust HTS material Named after the Russian mineralogist L.A.Perovski Also named for the general group of crystals having the same structure Modern HTS are perovskites
11
High Temperature superconductors Contains Cu oxide planes as a common structural feature Works with the help of liquid N as coolant Doesn’t follow BCS theory Made by mixing oxides & heating in furnaces with adequate oxygen supply
12
Making of Yr,Ba,Cu,Oxide HTS Mixing the chemicals Calcination Intermediate firings Final oxygen annealing
13
Even better superconductors Repeating the regrinding & oxygen annealing Using high temperatures for heating Oxygen annealing for long firing periods Grinding the material to a very fine powder before final annealing By protecting from moisture
14
Testing the superconductors By evaluating the levitating capacity Quality can also be improved by decreasing the air pressure around the system
15
Type-1 Superconductors Metals & metalloids Generally LTS Also known as soft superconductors Show perfect dia magnetism Pb, La, Ta, Hg
16
Observation of meissner effect
17
Type-2 Superconductors Consists of metallic compounds & alloys Metals like Va, Technetium & Niobium HTS materials Hard superconductors Will allow some penetration of external magnetic field into its surface
18
Type 2 Meissner effect
19
Atypical and Future Superconductors Fullerene superconductors Organic superconductors Heavy fermions Fluroargentates superconductors Ceramic superconductors Praseodymium 123 superconductors
20
Atypical & future superconductors Superconducting Niobium wire Hg based ceramic superconductor
21
Fullerene structure
22
Ceramic superconductor structure
23
Organic superconductor structure
24
Niobium superconductor
25
Technological applications of superconductivity Magnetometers, digital circuits, MRI, NMR, Control magnets in particle accelerators & fusion reactors, power cables, RF & microwave filters, high speed trains, industrial applications Replacing mechanical bearings
26
Importance of superconductors Transmission lines Motors Generators Superconducting magnetic energy storage Computers Magnetically levitated trains
27
HTS Research Areas To develop higher superconducting temperature materials To develop very large current carrying HTS cables To replace mechanical bearings
28
HTS cables Revolutionized the energy saving concepts Smaller than the conventional Cu & Al cables Higher current carrying capacity Widely used by European, American & Japanese power companies
29
HTS cables Carry up to 77MVA current at 69 kv transmission voltages Its higher cost of implementation is shadowed by the profit it makes
30
Alternative HTS cable designs Warm dielectric design Cold dielectric design Triaxial design
31
Warm dielectric design
32
Cold dielectric design
33
Triaxial design
34
Importance of HTS cables Plays an important role in controlling global warming Prevents the wastage of electrical energy Avoid the need for intermediate sub- stations & transformers for power transmission Energy savings from HTS cables could reach as much as 75000 kwh/year
35
Importance of HTS cables Produces zero energy wastage Can replace the conventional 3 phase power transmitting cables with a single triaxial configuration Avoids the construction of huge transmission towers
36
Conclusion HTS are the future materials Tomorrow there will be a HTS at our room temperature
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.