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Tunable Superconducting Magnetic Levitation with Self-Stability (2403.19168v1)

Published 28 Mar 2024 in eess.SY and cs.SY

Abstract: Magnetic levitation based on the flux pinning nature of type II superconductors has the merit of self-stability, making it appealing for applications such as high speed bearings, maglev trains, space generators, etc. However, such levitation systems physically rely on the superconductor pre-capturing magnetic flux (i.e. field cooling process) before establishing the levitation state which is nonadjustable afterwards. Moreover, practical type II superconductors in the levitation system inevitably suffer from various sources of energy losses, leading to continuous levitation force decay. These intrinsic drawbacks make superconducting maglev inflexible and impractical for long term operation. Here we propose and demonstrate a new form of superconducting maglev which is tunable and with self-stability. The maglev system uses a closed-loop type II superconducting coil to lock flux of a magnet, establishing self-stable levitation between the two objects. A flux pump is used to modulate the total magnetic flux of the coil without breaking its superconductivity, thus flexibly tuning levitation force and height meanwhile maintaining self-stability. For the first time, we experimentally demonstrate a self-stable type II superconducting maglev system which is able to: counteract long term levitation force decay, adjust levitation force and equilibrium position, and establish levitation under zero field cooling condition. These breakthroughs may bridge the gap between demonstrations and practical applications of type II superconducting maglevs.

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