All Stories

  1. Magnetic shielding up to 0.67 T at 77 K using a stack of high temperature superconducting tape annuli of 26 mm bore
  2. Measurement of Magnetic Hysteresis Loops of the Ni-5at.%W Alloy Substrate as a Function of Temperature in a Stack of 2G HTS-Coated Conductor Annuli
  3. Computation of Superconducting Stacks Magnetization in an Electrical Machine
  4. An experimental assessment of rotor superconducting stack demagnetization in a liquid nitrogen environment
  5. A trapped field of 17.7 T in a stack of high temperature superconducting tape
  6. Measurements of crossed-field demagnetisation rate of trapped field magnets at high frequencies and below 77 K
  7. Magnetic levitation using a stack of high temperature superconducting tape annuli
  8. Simulation and experiments of stacks of high temperature superconducting coated conductors magnetized by pulsed field magnetization with multi-pulse technique
  9. Uniform trapped fields produced by stacks of HTS coated conductor tape
  10. Magnetic Levitation Between a Slab of Soldered HTS Tape and a Cylindrical Permanent Magnet
  11. The effect of stabilizer on the trapped field of stacks of superconducting tape magnetized by a pulsed field
  12. The Use of an $\hbox{MgB}_{2}$ Hollow Cylinder and Pulse Magnetized (RE)BCO Bulk for Magnetic Levitation Applications
  13. Trapped fields greater than 7 T in a 12 mm square stack of commercial high-temperature superconducting tape
  14. Trapped fields up to 2 T in a 12 mm square stack of commercial superconducting tape using pulsed field magnetization
  15. Permanent Magnet Enhancement of Fully Superconducting MgB2-YBa2Cu3O7−x Bearing
  16. Enhanced trapped field achieved in a superconducting bulk using high thermal conductivity structures following simulated pulsed field magnetization
  17. Inkjet Printing, Pyrolysis and Crystallisation of YBa2Cu3O7-δ Precursor Layers for Fully Chemical Solution Deposited Coated Conductors
  18. High Force Magnetic Levitation Using Magnetized Superconducting Bulks as a Field Source for Bearing Applications
  19. New fully superconducting bearing concept using the difference in irreversibility field of two superconducting components