Co-extrusion printing of filaments for superconducting wire
10923647 ยท 2021-02-16
Assignee
- Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated (Palo Alto, CA)
- ENERGY-TO-POWER SOLUTIONS (E2P) (Knoxville, TN, US)
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A method of manufacturing a superconducting tape includes forming a slurry of superconducting material, forming a slurry of sacrificial material, extruding the slurries of superconducting and sacrificial materials as interdigitated stripes onto a substrate, and removing the sacrificial material to form superconducting filaments.
Claims
1. A method of manufacturing a superconducting metal tape, comprising: synthesizing a superconducting material external to a print head; forming a slurry of the superconducting material; forming a slurry of sacrificial material; depositing the slurries of superconducting material and the sacrificial material as one flow of multiple interdigitated stripes of each material onto a metal substrate using the print head, wherein the slurry of superconducting material and the slurry of sacrificial material are formulated so the slurries avoid mixing when the slurries come into contact; sintering the slurries; and removing the sacrificial material to form superconducting filaments.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein forming the slurry of superconducting material comprises mixing a powder of the superconducting material into an organic solvent with a binder.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein mixing the powder into an organic solvent comprises mixing magnesium diboride powder into butyl carbitol.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein mixing the powder into an organic solvent comprises mixing magnesium diboride powder and chemical dopants into butyl carbitol.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein forming a second slurry of sacrificial material comprises mixing a binder into a solvent.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein mixing a binder into a solvent comprises dissolving a cellulose binder into an organic solvent.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising forming the metal tape into a rotor for a synchronous machine.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein sintering the slurries also removes the sacrificial material and comprises heating the substrate and slurries to a temperature in the range of 700800 C.
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising sintering the slurry of superconducting material separately from removing the sacrificial material.
10. The method of claim 1, further comprising coating the substrate with a buffer layer prior to depositing the slurries.
11. The method of claim 1, further comprising coating the stripes of superconducting material with a top layer.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein forming the slurry of superconducting material comprises forming the slurry of superconducting material including dopants selected to enhance the flux pinning of the superconducting material.
13. A method of manufacturing a superconducting metal tape, comprising: forming a slurry of a first material; forming a slurry of a second material; forming a slurry of sacrificial material; depositing the slurries of the first material, the second material, and the sacrificial material, as one flow of multiple interdigitated stripes of each material onto a substrate, wherein the slurries of the first material and the second material are formulated to allow them to react and form a superconducting compound after depositing; and removing the sacrificial material to form superconducting filaments.
14. A method of manufacturing a superconducting metal tape, comprising: forming a slurry of a first material by mixing powders of two different materials; forming the slurry of a sacrificial material; depositing the slurries of the first material and the sacrificial material, as one flow of multiple interdigitated stripes of each material onto a substrate; and sintering at least the slurry of the first material, wherein the slurry of the first material is formulated to allow the powders to form a superconducting compound during sintering.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
(6) As discussed above, many areas and applications would benefit from sub-50 micron superconducting wires. These range from the electric power industry to medical devices. For ease of understanding, the discussion below focuses on synchronous AC machines to provide a comparison between current hybrid machinery and fully superconducting machinery. This discussion merely serves as an example and is in no way intended to limit application of the embodiments of the invention as claimed, which are directed to sub-50 micron superconducting wire filaments and the methods of their manufacture.
(7) The commercial value of fully superconducting topologies for applications such as large power plant generators, which already operate at high efficiencies, is primarily driven by capital efficiency during construction through reduced generator sizes. This leads to smaller footprints and less supporting infrastructure. Some applications like large wind turbines over 10 MW, could see dramatic reductions in size and weight that will increase economic viability and lead to greater adoption. The reduction in size and weight comes from superconductors that can generate the same amount of power with less material. The below table provides a comparison.
(8) TABLE-US-00001 Hybrid Fully Permanent Super- Super- Machine Type Magnet conducting conducting Power (MW) 41 41 41 RPM 720 720 720 Material rotor/stator Permanent YBCO/Cu MgB.sub.2/Nb.sub.3Sn magnet/Cu Top Rotor(K)/Stator(K) 300/420 30/400 20-30/10 Mass (kg) 27,000 10,000 3,800 Specific torque (Nm/kg) 20 55 140 Net machine efficiency 94% 97% 99% (@ 15% of Carnot)
(9) As used here, the term superconducting, superconductor, superconductive, etc., refers to a material that has zero electrical resistance when cooled below a critical temperature (T.sub.a) and a complete ejection of magnetic field lines as the material enters the superconducting state.
(10) The term motor may be used as an example of a synchronous AC machine, with the understanding that the embodiments here apply to generators as well. No limitation to either motors or generators is intended, nor should it be implied. In addition, the embodiments here may also apply to induction motors, depending upon the selection of materials.
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(12) One of the challenges lies in high frequency operation. High frequency operations require filaments or wires that are sub-50 micrometers, and current manufacturing techniques for the filaments can only reach the sub-millimeter range. Other challenges include manufacturability and expense. None of the current processes can manufacture these filaments easily and the resulting processes are too expensive to make the filaments cost effective.
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(14) Essentially, two or more slurries or pastes are fed into the print head and then flowed into adjacent paths so the materials form adjacent stripes. For ease of discussion only two materials will be discussed. The flow of two adjacent stripes is then split vertically and rejoined laterally to form four stripes of alternating materials. The slurries are typically formulated so they do not mix when they come into contact with the other slurries. The vertically splitting and lateral joining can be repeated several times, resulting in a final flow if interdigitated stripes of materials, where each stripe of material forms a fine filament.
(15) In
(16) In the embodiment of
(17) After deposition of the slurries, the substrate and slurries undergoes heating to remove the excess liquid. The sacrificial material also undergoes removal, which may occur during heating or during a different process such as cleaning with a solvent, etc.
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(19) As will be discussed below, one or more layers may reside on the substrate prior to the deposition of the slurries. These optional layers will be deposited onto the substrate by one of many possible processes including sputtering, slot coating, vapor deposition, etc., prior to the extrusion of the slurries.
(20) One embodiment of the process is to print a stripe of MgB.sub.2 slurry, supported by stripes of sacrificial vehicle on both sides. This will be referred to as an ex-situ process, because the MgB.sub.2 is synthesized outside of the printhead, then ground up into particles, then turned into ink. In another embodiment of an in-situ process the process takes magnesium particles and boron particles, mix them together in the correct proportion, make an ink out of the mixture, and prints the same structure. Then, during the sintering process there is a reaction that turns the magnesium and boron powders into MgB.sub.2. The in-situ process forms the MgB.sub.2 after deposition.
(21) A third embodiment is to print three materials at once, such that each line is (Sacrificial ink)(Mg slurry)(B Slurry)(Sacrificial ink). Then, during the reaction process, the Mg diffuses into the B side to form the compound MgB.sub.2. This is also an in-situ process, but may require a different printhead than that shown in
(22) However the slurries are formed, they are extruded onto a substrate at 44. One must note that other slurries may be used in addition to the two slurries. Formation of three or more stripes of materials may provide wider separation between the stripes of superconducting material, for example, or serve other functions. The additional slurries may consist of a different or the same sacrificial material.
(23) Once the slurries have been deposited, the sacrificial material is removed at 46. In one embodiment, the removing of the sacrificial material takes the form of heating the substrate to a temperature in the range of 700-800 C. In this embodiment, this serves to remove the sacrificial material and its slurry, to remove excess liquid from the superconducting slurry, and sinter the superconductor particles, causing the superconducting material to become more dense and solid.
(24) These two processes, removal of the excess liquid from the superconducting slurry and the removal of the sacrificial material may involve two processes. The removal of the excess liquid may result from heating, drying or pressing the superconducting slurry as a separate process from the removal of the sacrificial material. The sacrificial material may be removed with a solvent or some type of mechanical process that does not affect the stripes of superconducting material. However, the heating process performs both of these tasks at one time and is more efficient.
(25) In one embodiment the process dries and sinters the film in two processes. If, for instance, the solvent was butyl carbitol (diethylene glycol butyl ether), which has a boiling point of 230 C., the process would heat the printed film up to 150 C. to let the film evaporate. A later process then sinters the film at 700-800 C. In an industrial setting, this may be done in one process in a conveyer-belt style oven, and this long oven would have a number of different heating zones, the first two of which would be longer and lower temperature to give the film time to dry before densification.
(26) Another consideration in forming the superconducting wires is coating or passivation, such as for heat management. The filaments produced by the above process will be flat, and after deposition and drying/sintering, there may be a need to coat them with some sort of metal. The materials of the superconducting filaments may microquench under the high magnetic fields typical inside superconducting machines. In order to avoid this, a layer of metal, such as copper, may be deposited over the filaments. Deposition may occur by one of many processes, including sputtering.
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(29) Alternatively, the structure has a metal substrate with a buffer layer as in
(30) Other modifications exist, including use of a non-metallic substrate such as SiC (silicon-carbide), carbon (C), graphene, alumina, sapphire, etc., and stripes of superconducting material on the non-metallic substrate, wherein each stripe is separated from adjacent stripes by a gap.
(31) In this manner, filaments of superconducting material are formed on a thin substrate and the filaments have a width of less than 50 micrometers. This makes them suitable for high frequency operation. Referring back to
(32) It should be noted that either the electrically conducting or electrically non-conducting substrates with the co-extruded superconducting filaments described in this disclosure can be bundled together to comprise a superconducting cable. The advantage of bundling multiple superconducting tapes in parallel is for enhanced current carrying capacity when compared with a single superconducting tape. Furthermore, it may be advantageous to twist and transpose these bundled superconducting tapes for further reductions in AC loss of the superconducting cable.
(33) It will be appreciated that variants of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be combined into many other different systems or applications. Various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations, or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.