The fundamental problems of applying high-Tc superconductors to power transmission lines were studied, and prototypes of multilayer-wound conductors were fabricated and evaluated.
Multifilamentary silver sheathed wires have good anti-strain. properties. A 61-filament bismuth(2223) wire proved to maintain 90% of initial transport current property after 150 cycles of bending (bent-straightened-bent reversely-straightened) with 0.18% strain. A 61-filament wire of 114m unit-length was produced and proved to have a Jc of 9,700 A/cm2 with an Ic of 9.34A for the whole length at 77.3K.
Using these multifilamentary wires, prototypes of multilayer-wound conductors were produced by the react-and-wind technique. A 1.4m long three layer-wound conductor could carry 590A (Jc=7.020A/cm2) in liquid nitrogen.
These results indicate that the basic problems of high-Tc superconductor application to power transmission lines will be overcome using this technology.