The invention relates to a method for manufacturing an all-around envelope from an electrical insulating material made of plastic enveloping at least one superconductor in which a molten/fused tube made of a fused thermoplastic insulating material is extruded onto the surface of the superconductor. Such a method is known for example from WO 00/11684.
This method is a continuous enveloping process at a process temperature that practically does not interfere with the superconducting properties of the superconductor. In this process the superconductor is extruded out of a guide channel extending along one thrust direction. The fused tube made of fused thermoplastic insulating material is extruded in the thrust direction from a jet whose exit opening envelops the superconductor, keeping it away from everything else. The molten/fused tube stretches with the thrust of the superconductor and is pulled over the surface of the superconductor, upon which the fused tube solidifies on the surface of the superconductor as it cools.
In this known method the application of an envelope made of thermoplastic material is accomplished in the thin-film extrusion technology according to the so-called tube stretch procedure. In it a fused tube is extruded from a jet whose dimensions are larger than the superconductor to be enveloped, which runs through a central guide channel along the center of the jet. This creates a tube around the superconductor that is stretched, i.e. elongated with the thrust of the superconductor until the final, desired thickness (strength) of the envelope wall (insulating layer) is reached.
This tube is pulled over the superconductor surface. Depending on the insulating material used, the so-called stretch degree, i.e. the elongation of the material, is generally between 5 and 15.
The stretching can best be accomplished by the simultaneous effect of a vacuum in the interior of the tube. This, together with a desirable pre-heating of the superconductor before entry into the guide channel and/or during the time the superconductor is pulled through the channel, creates a particularly tight and bubble-free fit of the envelope around the superconductor. The subsequent slow cooling, e.g. exposure to air, causes freezing and a stress-free fit of the fused material made of insulating material on the superconductor.
This insulating method known from the state of the art, however, has the serious disadvantage that the insulating layers plus any mechanical reinforcement layers are relatively thick, reducing thereby the total current density of the superconductor. Because of the overall increase in total current density in high-temperature superconductor over time, the Lorentz force load also increases. Depending on the use, the prevailing Lorentz forces can be so strong that the total current densities are irreversibly reduced.
The objective of the present invention is therefore to improve the insulating method of the type mentioned above in the sense that the total current density in the application increases noticeably, or that there are no degradation effects in the application.
The invention achieves this objective by mixing the short fibers of a fibrous material into the thermoplastic insulating material in the procedure mentioned above.
By using the short fibers of a fibrous material the total current density is therefore not reduced by the mechanical reinforcement and the separate insulation, but instead the two required actions are undertaken in the same cross section portion of the insulated and reinforced superconductor. By adding fibrous materials to the insulating material the superconductor can be subjected to much higher stretch stress and mechanical stress.
In a preferred embodiment glass fiber material is used as the fibrous material (high electrical insulating properties), however—depending on the requirements of the application—aramid materials or carbon fiber materials (less electrical insulating properties) are also conceivable. Furthermore, haphazardly oriented individual fibers, fibers parallel to the thrust direction or a fiber netting can be used.
Typically, the short fibers have a length of about 20-30 mm. Depending on the desired thickness of the insulating layer and the netting of the fibers, much shorter or longer nettings, or even full nettings, are also possible.
Typically polyethylene, elastomers of polystyrene-ethylene-butylene, polyurethane elastomers, ethylene-vinyl acetate-copolymer or acrylic acid-acrylate-copolymer are used as thermoplastic materials that are the basis of the insulating material.
The aspect ratios that are achievable with the method according to the invention are at least 2.5, preferably however at least 8. At least one superconductor with oxidix high-temperature superconducting material can be provided with an envelope. The band-shaped superconductor may have a maximum band thickness of 0.5 mm. The band-shaped superconductor may have several conductor cores made of superconducting material embedded in normally conducting material. The method can also be used for enveloping a superconducting multiple or group conductor that has at least one superconducting individual conductor or super conductor core.
The invention is explained in detail below using examples of embodiment. In it
Corresponding parts in the illustrations are shown with the same reference numbers. Parts that are not shown are known from the current state of the art. The method is implemented using a facility containing a so-called extruder with an extrusion head that has the extrusion jet shown in longitudinal section or frontal view in
The insulating material of the envelope 4 is sintered in the extruder, which is not shown, conveyed to the extrusion head per distributing system and pressed as fused material 6 into a jet orifice 7 of the extrusion jet 2.
The insulating material in this case is a thermoplast that initially has the form of a granulate. Typical thermoplasts are polyethylene, polyurethane or various copolymers. The thermoplast granulate is preferably mixed with short fibers.
At an exit opening 8 of the jet orifice 7, whose orifice width at that point is noticeably larger than the final thickness d of the envelope 4 around the strip line 5, a fused tube 9 exits in the thrust direction v that is stretched in the form of a stretch cone because its cone point is attached to the band-shaped superconductor and is applied to the superconductor with the layer thickness d required for the band-shaped superconductor. A vacuum generated in the guide channel 3 creates negative pressure inside the stretch cone that prevents air bubbles from forming between the envelope and the superconductor and that, together with the preheated superconductor, guarantees a good fit of the envelope 4 on the superconductor. The band-shaped superconductor enveloped in that way is shown in
As can be seen from
As shown in the embodiment example according to
All those thermoplastic materials that, while having a process or melting temperature that prevents any interference with the superconductor properties of the superconductor to be enveloped, in particular of the high-temperature superconductor 5, still guarantee enough plasticity for the extrusion layering process can be used as insulating plastic materials for envelope 4.
In principle, processing temperatures above approx. 400° C. are not suitable for enveloping high-temperature superconducting materials based on bismuth-cuprate of the 2223 type and embedded in silver (depending on the atmospheric conditions). In this case, therefore, thermoplastic materials are used containing e.g. a corresponding polyethylene, a corresponding polystyrene-ethylene-butylene-elastomer, a corresponding polyurethane-elastomer, a corresponding ethylene/vinyl acetate-copolymer or an acrylic acid/acrylate-copolymer. If a transparent insulating material such as a thermoplastic polyurethane elastomer is used, the insulating envelope can also be colored with dyes. These mentioned thermoplasts are mixed with fibers, such as carbon fibers available under the trade name Grafil34-700, Pyrofil TR50, Torayca T700 or Panex 33. However, the preference is for aramids or E-glass such as fiber glass or Aramid-Twaron 2200.
The thin-film or extrusion layering method according to the invention is above all suitable for enveloping band-shaped high-temperature superconductors whose strip line thickness is below 1.5 mm, preferably below 0.5 mm and that have a high aspect ratio of at least 2.5, preferably at least 8. For example, such a band-shaped high-temperature superconductor can have a width of 3.6 mm and a thickness of 0.25 mm. All known oxidic superconductor materials with high transition temperatures can be considered as high-temperature superconductor materials, in particular those that allow cooling with the use of liquid nitrogen. Materials based on copper and copper oxide or bismuth cuprates can be considered as especially suitable, but also the conventional metallic superconductor and high-temperature superconductors in thin-film form on a band-shaped carried are suitable for this procedure.
The examples of embodiment made the assumption that the superconductors to be coated are band-shaped high-temperature superconductors. While the method according to the invention is of great advantage for enveloping such superconductors, it can be used equally well for superconductors of the “classic” kind, namely for superconductors based on niobium, e.g. Nb3Sn or Nb3Ge, or NbTi, or also for high-temperature superconductors in thin-film form on a band-shaped carrier (e.g. Yba2Cu3Ox with possible buffer layers on texturized nickel bands or steel bands).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102 08 139. 5 | Feb 2002 | DE | national |
This application is a continuation of copending International Application No. PCT/EP03/01753 filed Feb. 20, 2003 which designates the United States, and claims priority to German application no. 102 08 139.5 filed Feb. 26, 2002.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | PCT/EP03/01753 | Feb 2003 | US |
Child | 10926605 | Aug 2004 | US |