Superconducting power cables are one of the most promising energy applications of high-temperature superconductors. Losses in superconducting power cables are mainly due to AC, thermal and dielectric eects. The interplay of cable geometry, operating conditions, transmitted power, and the resulting l
Development of polymer-insulated superconducting power cables
โ Scribed by Masamitsu Kosaki; Masayuki Nagao; Yukio Mizuno; Noriyuki Shimizu; Kenji Horii
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 576 KB
- Volume
- 20
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0920-3796
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โฆ Synopsis
A solid electrical insulation design was proposed for the very simple version of a superconducting cable by incorporating polymeric materials suited for the cable extrusion. The features of this insulation lie in the exclusion of electrically vulnerable cryogens from the electrical insulation and in the exploitation of excellent insulation capability of polymers in the cryogenic temperature region, which may realize the reliable operation for the long run. Since cryogen circulates in the central core pipe, it can either be cold helium or nitrogen corresponding to the working temperature of adopted superconductors.
Low-density polyethylene, cross-linked polyethylene and ethylene propylene rubber were successively applied to the extruded electrical insulation of the cable. The cooling characteristics and voltage tests were repeated. It turned out that ethylene propylene rubber behaved satisfactorily even at liquid-helium temperature.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The simultaneous application of the design voltage (20 kVrms) and current (2 kArms) to ethylenepropylene-rubber (EPRI-insulated superconducting cable, cooled by liquid helium, was successfully carried out. The superconductor was a niobium layer clad on a copper pipe. The EPR insulation was extruded