Transforming highways for high-speed travel and energy transport

Schematic illustration of the superconducting highway for energy transport and storage and superconductor levitation for the transport of people and goods.
Credit: Vakaliuk et al.

Revolutionary design could combine superconductor levitation, lossless electricity transmission, and liquid hydrogen transportation into one system.

Superconductors can conduct electricity without any resistance or power loss, and they can effortlessly cause magnets to levitate above them. These properties would make superconductors useful for high-speed trains or long-distance power transmission, except for one glaring problem: superconductors only work at low temperatures, more than a hundred degrees below zero.

This one requirement makes building a hyperefficient electrical grid or high-speed rail network very expensive. Unless, that is, a superconductor network could accomplish both tasks at the same time.

In APL Energy, by AIP Publishing, researchers from the University of Houston, Adelwitz Technologiezentrum GmbH, and the Leibniz Institute for Solid State and Materials Research developed a proof of concept for a superconducting highway that could transport vehicles and electricity, cooling the necessary superconductors with a pipeline of liquid hydrogen.

Most magnetic levitation designs feature the superconductor inside the vehicle, which is suspended above a magnetic track. The authors decided to flip that arrangement upside down, putting the superconductor on the ground and giving each vehicle a magnet. The result is a system with multiple uses, placing it within the realm of affordability.

“Superconductor-levitated magnetic vehicles, instead of magnet-levitated superconducting vehicles, can provide additional benefits such as electrical power transmission and storage,” said author Zhifeng Ren. “We developed a new superconducting system that can transport and store a huge amount of energy and also transport people and goods with speeds of at least 400 miles per hour.”

Their design solves the problem of superconductor cooling with a liquid hydrogen pipeline. Hydrogen is a promising clean fuel source with a complex handling issue: It is a gas at room temperature, so transporting and storing it involves either dangerous pressurized tanks or costly cryogenic temperatures. In the team’s proposal, the cost of cooling the superconductor and the cost of transporting hydrogen become the same.

Using a scale model in the lab, they demonstrated that these applications can coexist, and now they hope to build a full-scale demonstration. The authors envision their system would sit underneath existing highways to make use of current infrastructure.

“People can drive onto the superconducting highway any time without waiting for a train or airplane, and modifying the existing highways means there is no need to acquire land for the tracks,” said Ren. “With enough financial support, we could make a working system over a relatively short distance, like from Houston to Austin.”

The article “A multifunctional highway system incorporating superconductor levitated vehicles and liquefied hydrogen” is authored by Oleksii Vakaliuk, Shaowei Song, Uta Floegel-Delor, Frank N. Werfel, Kornelius Nielsch, and Zhifeng Ren. It will appear in APL Energy on April 24, 2023 (DOI: 10.1063/5.0139834). After that date, it can be accessed at https://aip.scitation.org/doi/10.1063/5.0139834.

ABOUT THE JOURNAL

APL Energy is an open access journal that features original research on significant topical issues related to energy and the integration of different energy technologies. See http://aplenergy.aip.org.

Journal: APL Energy
DOI: 10.1063/5.0139834
Article Title: A multifunctional highway system incorporating superconductor levitated vehicles and liquefied hydrogen
Article Publication Date: 24-Apr-2023

Media Contact

Ashley Piccone
American Institute of Physics
media@aip.org
Office: 301.209.3090

www.aip.org

Media Contact

Ashley Piccone
American Institute of Physics

All latest news from the category: Physics and Astronomy

This area deals with the fundamental laws and building blocks of nature and how they interact, the properties and the behavior of matter, and research into space and time and their structures.

innovations-report provides in-depth reports and articles on subjects such as astrophysics, laser technologies, nuclear, quantum, particle and solid-state physics, nanotechnologies, planetary research and findings (Mars, Venus) and developments related to the Hubble Telescope.

Back to home

Comments (0)

Write a comment

Newest articles

Organic matter on Mars was formed from atmospheric formaldehyde

Although Mars is currently a cold, dry planet, geological evidence suggests that liquid water existed there around 3 to 4 billion years ago. Where there is water, there is usually…

Engineers 3D print sturdy glass bricks for building structures

The interlocking bricks, which can be repurposed many times over, can withstand similar pressures as their concrete counterparts. What if construction materials could be put together and taken apart as…

New organic thermoelectric device

… that can harvest energy at room temperature. Researchers have succeeded in developing a framework for organic thermoelectric power generation from ambient temperature and without a temperature gradient. Researchers have…

Partners & Sponsors