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Energy and the Physical Sciences: Novel multi-seeded bulk superconductors for sustainable engineering applications

Reference Number
EP/K02910X/1
Title
Energy and the Physical Sciences: Novel multi-seeded bulk superconductors for sustainable engineering applications
Status
Completed
Energy Categories
Energy Efficiency(Residential and commercial)
Not Energy Related
Other Power and Storage Technologies
Energy Efficiency(Industry)
Research Types
Basic and strategic applied research
Science and Technology Fields
PHYSICAL SCIENCES AND MATHEMATICS (Physics)
ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY (General Engineering and Mineral & Mining Engineering)
UKERC Cross Cutting Characterisation
Not Cross-cutting
Principal Investigator
Professor DA Cardwell
Engineering
University of Cambridge
Award Type
Standard
Funding Source
EPSRC
Start Date
01 October 2013
End Date
30 September 2016
Duration
36 months
Total Grant Value
£472,525
Industrial Sectors
Materials sciences
Region
East of England
Programme
Energy : Physical Sciences
Investigators
Principal Investigator
Professor DA Cardwell, Engineering, University of Cambridge
Industrial Collaborator
Project Contact, Technische Universität Wien, Austria
Project Contact, Boeing Phantom Works, USA
Project Contact, IFW Dresden, Germany
Project Contact, University of Liège,Belgium
Project Contact, Siemens plc (UK)
Web Site
Objectives
Abstract
The ability to generate strong and stable magnetic fields is a critical enabling technology for a broad range of sustainable engineering applications. Almost invariably, more compact field sources and higher magnetic field densities lead directly to more efficient and cost effective devices. One example of this can be found in the widespread applications of small, high power DC electric motors, which have proliferated since the development of the cheap high energy density family of NdFeB materials in the 1980s. Wire-wound superconducting magnets, on the other hand, may offer the potential to generate large magnetic fields, but they are extremely expensive and are difficult to manufacture. A cheaper, simpler and more robust option is the use of magnetised bulk superconductors. The (RE)BCO (where RE = rare earth element such as Y, Nd, Sm, Gd, etc.) family of bulk, melt processed high temperature superconductors (HTS), in particular, is the subject of extensive world-wide developmental research. Bulk HTS materials offer considerable potential to both improve the performance of existing devices that incorporate permanent magnets and to develop new, high field and sustainable energy storage applications, in particular. Indeed, these materials represent a direct link between the physical sciences and the development of sustainable applications in the energy needs sector that will be fundamental to growth of the UK economy in the short to medium term.A number of important scientific and technical challenges to the incorporation of (RE)BCO bulk superconducting materials into practical engineering applications remain. These include improving process efficiency, sample properties, yield, reducing the cost of raw materials, recycling, processing larger samples with conformal geometries, development of a practical magnetisation process and the development of bespoke cryogenic systems for specific applications.The main objective of this proposal is to address and overcome the critical aspects of these challenges to gain a fundamental understanding of the single grain growth process. This will enable the cost-effective processing of (RE)BCO materials with conformal geometries that will be fundamental to their application in a range of sustainable engineering devices within the energy sector and healthcare industry. Specific emphasis of the project will be placed on the development of an effective recycling process to enable a new secondary bulk sample source for low to medium field applications, the development of a novel multi-seeding technique for fabricating large samples of conformal geometry and the development of a novel fabrication process based on a graded composition to produce bulk samples with homogeneous superconducting properties throughout the bulk microstructure.
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Added to Database
19/11/13