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Cables superconducting

Twenty-five kilograms of this experimental superconducting wire can carry as much current as 1800 kg of the bulky cable shown behind the wire. [Pg.314]

High-temperature superconducting power cable system, 23 854... [Pg.438]

In 1996, a 50 m underground superconducting cable (wound from 6 km of a BSCCO ribbon) and a 150 kW superconducting electric motor were successfully demonstrated. Further development of practical superconductor devices might well depend more on the development of suitable refrigeration technology than on the preparation of new superconducting materials. [Pg.426]

Why might wind-rich states be particularly interested in the development of the long-range, high-capacity, superconducting cables discussed in Chapter 18 ... [Pg.672]

In May 2001, the Danish city of Copenhagen established a first when it implemented a 30-meter-long high temperature superconductivity (HTS) cable in its own energy grids. Other small but successful implementations have occurred in the U.S. [Pg.71]

While cable for superconductivity is both exotic and expensive, the cost is plummeting as production ramps up, and the advantages can be exceptional. Increasing production to commercial levels at an economic cost, as well as producing lengths suitable for transmission purposes remain among the largest hurdles for the superconductor industry. [Pg.72]

Superconductivity Products Power Electronic Switches SMES Systems Electric Motors Generators Superconducting Materials Electric Transmission Cables Nanodots... [Pg.174]

Superconductivity The ability of a material to act as a conductor for electricity without the gradual loss of electricity over distance (due to resistance) that is normally associated with electric transmission. There are two types of superconductivity. Low-temperature superconductivity (LTS) requires that transmission cable be cooled to -418 degrees Fahrenheit. Even newer technologies are creating a so-called high-temperature superconductivity... [Pg.27]

For example, American Superconductor (ASC) of Westborough, Massachusetts, in conjunction with Pirelli Cable of Milan, Italy, has produced a prototype, high-temperature superconducting wire that exceeds the current-carrying threshold required for commercial underground power transmission cables. [Pg.789]


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Cables

High temperature superconducting cables

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