Claims
- 1. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable, that comprises: three longitudinally extending hollow superconductors in a trefoil configuration cooled internally by a cryogenic fluid and in a vacuum environment; three longitudinally extending metallic heat shields disposed radially outward from the three superconductors, the heat shields being cooled by a cryogenic fluid and being electrically isolated from one another and from the hollow superconductors; and a longitudinally extending metallic vacuum enclosure disposed radially outward from the heat shields and electrically isolated therefrom and from the superconductors.
- 2. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 1 in which the three superconductors are disposed in a vacuum space which separates one from the other and are mechanically secured to one another at longitudinally spaced intervals along the cable by electrically insulating supports.
- 3. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 2 in which the heat shields are separated from said vacuum enclosure by a vacuum space and are mechanically connected to the vacuum enclosure at longitudinally spaced intervals along the cable by further electrically insulating supports.
- 4. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 1 in which each of the hollow superconductors comprises pipe of normal metal to provide mechanical strength to contain the cryogenic fluid within, each pipe having at least one continuous superconducting material layer bonded thereto and extending the whole length of the pipe.
- 5. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 4 in which each of the longitudinal heat shields is extruded aluminum having a hollow portion to contain the cryogenic fluid to cool the heat shield.
- 6. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 5 in which the vacuum enclosure is a further extruded aluminum pipe.
- 7. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 1 in which the inner elements within said further extruded aluminum pipe are nested, the three hollow superconductors being the innermost elements and being separated about 120.degree. from one another in said vacuum environment, in which the heat shields are in a trefoil configuration and separated from one another by about 120.degree., the center of each heat shield being disposed at the same angular location as one superconductor and the heat shields being separated from one another by a vacuum space to provide electrical isolation.
- 8. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 7 in which an optically overlapped arrangment of the heat shields is provided so that no direct heat radiation can reach the enclosed cold space about the three hollow superconductors.
- 9. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 1 in which the superconductors are cooled by liquid helium and the shields are cooled by liquid nitrogen.
- 10. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable as claimed in claim 1 in which the three superconductors and the three heat shields form a nested configuration in which the superconductors are the inner elements and the heat shields the outer elements, in which the heat shields are in a trefoil configuration, one heat shield being disposed radially outward from each superconductor, the azimuthal position of the heat shields being transposed at regular axial intervals to change the particular heat shield disposed radially outward from each superconductor.
- 11. A three-phase a-c superconducting high-voltage cable that comprises: three longitudinally extending superconductors in a trefoil configuration cooled internally by a cryogenic fluid and in a vacuum environment; three longitudinally extending conductive shields disposed radially outward from the three superconductors, the conductive shields being cooled by a cryogenic fluid and being electrically isolated from one another and from the superconductors; and a longitudinally extending conductive vacuum enclosure disposed radially outward from the heat shields and electrically isolated therefrom.
Government Interests
The invention described herein was made in the course of or under a contract from the National Science Foundation, an agency of the United States Government.
US Referenced Citations (11)