AP8-6

Manufacturing Current Flow Diverter coated conductors for fault current limiters

Dec.3 16:30-16:50 (Tokyo Time)

Pedro Barusco1, Xavier Granados1, Xavier Obradors1, Teresa Puig1, Christian Lacroix2, Frédéric Sirois2, Alexandre Zampa3, Pascal Tixador3, Roxana Vlad4, Albert Calleja4, Markus Bauer5

Institut de Ciència de Materials de Barcelona (ICMAB-CSIC) Campus de la UAB, 08193 Bellaterra, Barcelona, Spain1

Chemin de Polytechnique 2500, Montréal, Canada2

Université Grenoble Alpes – CNRS,25 Avenue des Martyrs, 38042 Grenoble, France3

OXOLUTIA SL, AvingudadelCastell de Barberà, 26, 08210, Barcelona,Spain4

THEVA DünnschichttechnikGmbH, Rote-Kreuz-Straße 8, 85737 Ismaning, Germany5

For creating direct fault isolation in multi-terminal HVDC systems, the Superconducting Fault Current limiter comes as a promising candidate thanks to its fast intrinsic resistive switching operation. However, for fault current levels close to its average critical current, the state-of-the-art architecture of coated conductors (CC) are prone to develop destructive hot spots due to variations in their local critical current. The Current Flow Diverter (CFD) concept is a modification of the CC architecture concept that has proven to increase the conductor’s robustness against hot-spot regime by boosting the normal zone propagation velocity (NZPV) [1]. This architecture works by creating a high resistive interface between the metallic shunt and the superconducting (RE)BCO in the central section of a conventional CC. In the framework of the FASTGRID project, this work discusses the details in manufacturing novel architectures of CFD CCs in a reel-to-reel system based on 12 mm-wide THEVA CCs using different materials as the resistive layer to create the CFD effect. The experimental CFD CC was tested for current fault limitation in both clear and hot-spot regime and later analyzed using Scanning Hall Probe Microscopy to verify the structural integrity of the superconducting layer. We demonstrate that the NZPV value is enhanced up to 7 times when compared to conventional CCs at the same current intensity.

[1] Lacroix C, Lapierre Y, Coulombe J and Sirois F 2014,High normal zone propagation velocity in second generation high-temperature superconductor coated conductors with a current flow diverter architecture, Supercond. Sci. Technol27 055013

Keywords: CFD, Normal zone propagation velocity, Coated conductors, Fastgrid

pict