Numerical Modelling of Bulk Superconductor Magnetization

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The purpose of the book is to provide a comprehensiveoverview of all the numerical modelling considerations required to model the magnetizationof bulk superconductors, with practical examples.

Author(s): Mark Ainslie, Hiroyuki Fujishiro
Publisher: IOP Publishing
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 132
City: Bristol

PRELIMS.pdf
Preface
Acknowledgements
Author biographies
Mark Ainslie
Hiroyuki Fujishiro
CH001.pdf
Chapter 1 Fundamentals of bulk superconducting materials
1.1 Bulk superconductors
1.2 Magnetic properties of bulk superconductors
1.2.1 Superconducting material classifications
1.2.2 Flux pinning and trapping
1.2.3 Flux creep
1.3 Fabrication processes
1.3.1 Bulk (RE)BCO superconductors
1.3.2 Bulk MgB2 superconductors
1.3.3 Bulk iron–pnictide superconductors
1.4 Magnetisation of bulk superconductors
1.4.1 Pulsed field magnetisation
1.5 Bulk superconductor applications
1.5.1 Flux pinning applications
1.5.2 Flux trapping applications
1.5.3 Flux shielding applications
1.5.4 Magnetic lens
1.5.5 Conductor alternative
References
CH002.pdf
Chapter 2 Numerical modelling of bulk superconducting materials
2.1 Modelling of bulk superconductors
2.1.1 Analytical techniques
2.1.2 Numerical techniques
2.2 Finite element method (FEM)
2.2.1 Modelling bulk superconductors using FEM
References
CH003.pdf
Chapter 3 Modelling magnetisation of bulk superconductors
3.1 Magnetisation of bulk superconductors
3.1.1 Zero-field-cooled (ZFC) and field-cooled (FC) magnetisation
3.1.2 Pulsed field magnetisation (PFM)
References
CH004.pdf
Chapter 4 Demagnetisation and novel, hybrid superconductor structures
4.1 Demagnetisation effects and AC losses
4.2 Novel and hybrid bulk superconductor structures
4.2.1 Composite structures with improved thermal conductivity
4.2.2 Hybrid ferromagnet-superconductor structures
4.2.3 Hollow bulk cylinders and tubes for shielding
4.2.4 Hybrid trapped field magnet lens
References
APP1.pdf
Chapter
A.1 Introduction
A.2 Experimental procedure
A.2.1 Thermal conductivity
A.2.2 Thermal dilatation
A.3 Typical results
A.3.1 Bulk (RE)BCO
A.3.2 Bulk MgB2
Further reading