Maglev Report
Maglev Report
Submitted to:-
Submitted
A NO:- 07EMTEC050
MAGLEV
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
The basic beatitude, bliss and euphoria that accompany the successful completion of any task would not be completed without the expression of complete appreciation of simple virtues to the people who made it possible. So, with reverence honor we acknowledge all those guidance and encouragement has made successful in winding up this. I wish to express my unlimited gratitude and thanks to my seminar guide Mr. HIMANSHU KHANDELWAL and all respected persons. I am also very thankful to Mr. K. K. BHARGAVA (Head Of Department) and all Teachers and other staff members of MAIET, Jaipur who have directly and indirectly helped in our earnest effort to help this seminar.
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PREFACE
The Technical seminar is an essential requirement for an engineering student.The student has to complete the technical seminar for the pre describe period as per the university norms. The purpose of technical seminar is to help the student to gain presentation experience. Moreover, as for the utility of technical seminar, concerning, it can be said that student gets an opportunity during his technical seminar to imply the basic knowledge in the field work and to clear the difficulties in a better way. In the year 2010, in between 8th semester, we completed our technical seminar on Manetically Levitated Trains.
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S. No. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
TOPIC
PAGES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT PREFACE INTRODUCTION OF MAGNETIC LEVITATION HISTORY OF MAGLEV TRAINS MAGNETICALLY LEVITATED TRAINS (MAGLEV) ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES FUTURE EXPANSION OF MAGLEV TECHNOLOGY CONCLUSION REFRENCES
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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CHAPTER-1
INTRODUCTION MAGNETIC LEVITATION
Magnetic levitation, maglev, or magnetic suspension is a method by which an object is suspended above another object with no support other than magnetic field .The electromagnetic force is used to counteract the effects of the gravitational force.
A substance which is diamagnetic repels a magnetic field. All materials have diamagnetic properties, but the effect is very weak, and usually overcome by the object's paramagnetic or ferromagnetic properties, which act in the opposite manner. Any material in which the diamagnetic component is strongest will be repelled by a magnet, though this force is not usually very large. Diamagnetic levitation can be
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used to levitate very light pieces of pyrolytic graphite or bismuth above a moderately strong permanent magnet. As water is predominantly diamagnetic, this technique has been used to levitate water droplets.
Where: is the magnetic susceptibility is the density of the material g is the local gravitational acceleration (-9.8 m/s2 on Earth) 0 is the permeability of free space B is the magnetic field
is the rate of change of the magnetic field along the vertical axis. Assuming ideal conditions along the z-direction of solenoid magnet:
Water levitates at
Graphite at
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MAGLEV METHODS
Repulsion between like poles of permanent magnets or electromagnets. Repulsion between a magnet and a metallic conductor induced by relative motion. Repulsion between a metallic conductor and an AC electromagnet. Repulsion between a magnetic field and a diamagnetic substance. Repulsion between a magnet and a superconductor. Attraction between unlike poles of permanent magnets or electromagnets. Attraction between the open core of an electromagnetic solenoid and a piece of iron or a magnet. Attraction between a permanent magnet or electromagnet and a piece of iron. Attraction between an electromagnet and a piece of iron or a magnet, with sensors and active control of the current to the electromagnet used to maintain some distance between them. Repulsion between an electromagnet and a magnet, with sensors and active control of the current to the electromagnet used to maintain some distance between them.
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CHAPTER-2
HISTORY OF MAGLEV
Original Patent(1941)
The first patent for a magnetic levitation train propelled by linear motors was German Patent 707032, issued in June 1941. A U.S. patent, dated 1 October 1907, is for a linear motor propelled train in which the motor, below the steel track, carried some but not all of the weight of the train. The inventor was Alfred Zehden of Frankfurt-am-Main, Germany.
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Saitama, Japan 1988 HSST-04-1 exhibited it at Saitama exhibition performed in Kumagaya, and runs. Best speed per hour 30km/h. Yokohama, Japan 1989
HSST-05 acquires a business driver's license at Yokohama exhibition and carries out general test ride driving. Maximum speed 42km/h.
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CHAPTER-3
Magnetically Levitated Trains (MAGLEV)
The principal of a Magnet train is that floats on a magnetic field and is propelled by a linear induction motor. They follow guidance tracks with magnets. These trains are often referred to as Magnetically Levitated a train which is abbreviated to Maglev. Although maglev don't use steel wheel on steel rail usually associated with trains, the dictionary definition of a train is a long line of vehicles traveling in the same direction - it is a train.
A super high-speed transport system with a non-adhesive drive system that is independent of wheel-and-rail frictional forces has been a long-standing dream of railway engineers. Maglev, a combination of superconducting magnets and linear motor technology, realizes super high-speed running, safety, reliability, low environmental impact and minimum maintenance.
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LEVITATION FORCE
The first thing a maglev system must do is get off the ground, and then stay suspended off the ground. This is achieved by the electromagnetic levitation system. The levitating force is the upward thrust which lifts the vehicle in the air. There are 2 types of levitating systems A Electromagnetic suspension (EMS) uses the attractive magnetic force of a . magnet beneath a rail to lift the train up. B Electrodynamics suspension (EDS) uses a repulsive force between two . magnetic fields to push the train away from the rail.
MAGLEV concept using EMS employs attractive force. In EMS system the electromagnets are attached on the inside bottom of the casing that extend below and then curves back up to the ferromagnetic rail or track. The rail is in the shape of T.When current is passed, the electromagnet is switched on, there is attraction
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between the electromagnet and rail, and raise up to meet the rail. This levitates about 1/3 of an inch (1 cm) above the guideway and keeps the train levitated even when its not moving. Other embedded guidance magnet keeps the train moving from side to side. The electromagnet use feedback control to maintain a train at a constant distance from the track, by controlling the attractive force by varying the current. There is no need of wheels.
The batteries can levitate the train for 30 minutes without any additional energy.
Linear generators in the magnets on board the train use the motion of the train to recharge the batteries.
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Germany developed MAGLEV Train based on similar concept called Transrapid. Germany has demonstrated that the maglev train can reach 300 mph with people onboard.
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A more advanced EDS-repulsive system, worked on by the Japanese (and Americans), utilizes a U-shaped guideway, in which the vehicle nestles in between the U-shaped guideway (this makes the vehicle very stable, it can't overturn). Coils are implanted in the walls of the U- shaped guideway, called guidewalls. Thus, the guideway is not below, but out to the sides. Now the repulsion goes perpendicularly outward from the vehicle to the coils in the guidewalls. The perpendicular repulsion still provides lift.
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INDUCTRACK
The Inductrack is a newer type of EDS that uses permanent room-temperature magnets to produce the magnetic fields instead of powered electromagnets or cooled superconducting magnets. Inductrack uses a power source to accelerate the train only until begins to levitate. If the power fails, the train can slow down gradually and stop on its auxiliary wheels. The inductrack guide way would contain two rows of tightly packed levitation coils, which would act as the rails. Each of these rails would be lined by two Halbach arrays carried underneath the maglev vehicle: one positioned directly above the rail and one along the inner side of the rail. The Halbach arrays above the coils would provide levitation while the Halbach arrays on the sides would provide lateral guidance that keeps the train in a fixed position on the track.
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There are two Inductrack designs: Inductrack I and Inductrack II. Inductrack I is designed for high speeds, while Inductrack II is suited for slow speeds. Inductrack trains could levitate higher with greater stability. As long as it's moving a few miles per hour, an Inductrack train will levitate nearly an inch (2.54 cm) above the track. A greater gap above the track means that the train would not require complex sensing systems to maintain stability. Permanent magnets had not been used before because scientists thought that they would not create enough levitating force. The Inductrack design bypasses this problem by arranging the magnets in a Halbach array. The magnets are configured so that the intensity of the magnetic field concentrates above the array instead of below it. They are made from a newer material comprising a neodymium-iron-boron alloy, which generates a higher magnetic field. The Inductrack II design incorporates two Halbach arrays to generate a stronger magnetic field at lower speeds.
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2. PROPULSION FORCE
This is a horizontal force which causes the movement of train. It requires 3 parameters. Large electric power supply Metal coil lining, a guide way or track. Large magnet attached under the vehicle
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Maglev vehicles are propelled primarily by one of the following options: 1. A Linear Synchronous Motor (LSM): In which coils in the guideway are excited by a three phase winding to produce a traveling wave at the speed desired. 2. A Linear Induction Motor (LIM): In which an electromagnet underneath the vehicle induces current in an aluminum sheet on the guideway.
2.2 PROPULSION OF EMS SYSTEM In the attractive-EMS system, electromagnetic attraction is also used to power the train vehicle forward, but it uses a electromagnetic system dedicated for propulsion and separate from the electromagnetic system used for levitation. For propulsion purposes, there are ferromagnetic stator packets (with three-phase mobile field windings) attached to the guideway. When activated, they attract the electromagnet onboard the maglev. A three-phase current, of varying frequency, is used, and generated through different stators in different segments of the track. The stators that are excited are always just in front of the maglev vehicle. As the stators
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are excited sequentially, the electromagnets onboard 'chase' the current forward along the track, providing forward motion, or propulsion. The EMS-attractive system maglev surfs with its support magnets on the alternating magnetic field generated in the roadway. The created electromagnetic wave is actually a mobile or traveling electromagnetic wave. The EMS-attractive system is sometimes labeled a "pull" system: the vehicle is pulled forward. Braking is done by reversing the magnetic field. Some trains also have air flaps, like airplanes, to slow down, as well as wheels that extend downward or outward to the guideway for emergency braking in the unlikely event that everything else fails.
2.3 PROPULSION OF EDS SYSTEM The propulsion of the EDS-repulsive system can be described as "pull- then neutral- then push." (EDS-repulsive also usually uses a linear synchronous motor or a locally commutated motor). In the EDS system, coils or an aluminum sheet in the
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guideway are used for providing drive, although they also are different than the coils dedicated for the function of levitation. The coils in the guideway are excited by an alternating, three-phase current. This produces an alternating magnetic field, or standing magnetic wave. As with EMS- attraction, sections of the guideway are excited sequentially, with the excited section being immediately in front of the maglev vehicle. Superconducting magnets onboard the maglev vehicle are attracted to the section of the guideway immediately ahead of it, pulling the vehicle forward. Then, when the vehicle is directly overhead, the direction of the current (and thus the polarity) of the particular guideway segment is changed. During the fraction of a section in which the polarity is being changed, there is effectively neither an attractive nor repulsive interaction. But once the change in polarity occurs, and while the front of the vehicle is moving forward to the next excited portion of the guideway, a repulsive force is created, pushing the vehicle from behind. This occurs-- the vehicle's movement-- in coherence with the alternating magnetic field.
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So, if the EMS-attractive drive system is a "pull system," the EDS-repulsive drive system is a "pull-neutral-then push system". Only the section of the track where the train is traveling is needed to be electrified.
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Working of Maglev:
A maglev train floats about 10mm above the guidway on a magnetic field. It is propelled by the guidway itself rather than an onboard engine by changing magnetic fields (see right). Once the train is pulled into the next section the magnetism switches so that the train is pulled on again. The Electro-magnets run the length of the guideway.
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CHAPTER-4
Advantages of Maglev:
1 Safety
The trains are virtually impossible to derail because the train is wrapped around the track. Collisions between trains are unlikely because computers are controlling the trains movements.
2 Maintenance
There is very little maintenance because Due to the lack of physical contact between the track and the vehicle, there is no rolling friction, leaving only air resistance
3 Economic Efficiency
The powerful magnets demand a large amount of electricity to function so the train levitates. What makes the maglev trains much more expensive to build . Very costly to operate since it needs large magnets and a very advanced technology and huge amount of electrical power Operating expenses are half of that of other railroads. The linear generators produce electricity for the cabin of the train.
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4 Environment
No burning of fossil fuel, so no pollution, and the electricity needed will be nuclear or solar It uses less energy than existing transportation systems. For every seat on a 300 km trip with 3 stops, the gasoline used per 100 miles varies with the speed. At 200 km/h it is 1 liter, at 300 km/h it is 1.5 liters and at 400 km/h it is 2 liters. This is 1/3 the energy used by cars and 1/5 the energy used by jets per mile. The tracks have less impact on the environment because the elevated models (50ft in the air) allows all animals to pass, low models (5-10 ft) allow small animals to pass, they use less land than conventional trains, and they can follow the landscape better than regular trains since it can climb 10% gradients (while other trains can only climb 4 gradients) and can handle tighter turns.
5 Speed
The highest speed achieved on the Shanghai track has been 501 km/h (311 mph). The highest speed achieved on the JR-Maglev has reached 581 km/h (367 mph).
The highest speed achieved by any wheeled trains, the current TGV speed record is 574.8 km/h, 357.0 mph.
Comfort
The ride is smooth while not accelerating.
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But passengers traveling in a 250-mile-per-hour MAGLEV train will feel much stronger gravitational forces in rounding an interstate curve than will passengers in a car moving at 65 mi (105 km) per hour.
Noise
Because the major source of noise of a maglev train comes from displaced air, maglev trains produce less noise than a conventional train at equivalent speeds. Initial tests suggest that MAGLEV vehicles may produce a high level of noise when they operate at top speed. Tests have shown that sound levels of 100 decibels at a distance of 80 ft (24 m) from the guide way may be possible. Such levels of sound are, however, unacceptably high for any inhabited area.
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A possible solution
Although I haven't seen anywhere a solution could be to put normal steel wheels onto the bottom of a maglev train, which would allow it to run on normal railway once it was off the floating guideway.
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CHAPTER-5
FUTURE EXPANSIONS
In the far future Maglev technology are hoped to be used to transport vast volumes of water to far regions at a greater speed eliminating droughts.
Far more, space is an open door to maglev trains to propel space shuttle and cargo into space at a lower cost. Artists illustration of Star Tram, a magnetically levitated low-pressure tube, which can guide spacecraft into the upper atmosphere.
Scientists hope future technologies can get the train to operate at a 6000km/h, since theoretically the speed limit is limitless. But still its a long way to go.
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CONCLUSION
Its no longer science fiction, maglev trains are the new way of transportation in the near future, just some obstacles are in the way, but with some researches nothing is impossible. With no engine, no wheels, no pollution, new source of energy, floating on air, the concept has token tens of years to develop, just recently its true capacities has been realized. Competing planes with speed, boats with efficiency, traditional trains with safety, and cars with comfort, it seems like it isn't a fair fight.
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References
www.ieee.com www.chron.com www.dbamanufacturing.com www.singnet.com.sg news.bbc.co.uk The Official Transrapid Site- lots of information about Maglev Japanese Technical Research Institute- Japanese projects en.wikipedia.org
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