Driving Without Wheels Flying Without Wings
Driving Without Wheels Flying Without Wings
Driving Without Wheels Flying Without Wings
Maglev Principle
Evolution
2. Types of methods
3. Technology and working of maglev trains
System
Vehicle
Propulsion System
Control System
Guideway
Maglev Track
4.Maglev-The best option
Comparison with traditional systems
Pros and Cons
Safety
5.Control System
6.Conclusion
MAGLEV TRAINS
Maglev is a system of train transportation that uses two sets
of magnets, one set to repel and push the train up off the track
, then another set to move the floating train ahead at great
speed taking advantage of the lack of friction.
With Maglev technology, there are no moving parts. The train
travels along a guide way of magnets which control the train’s
stability and speed. Maglev trains are therefore quieter and
smoother than conventional trains, and have the potential for
much higher speed.
Maglev trains can accelerate and decelerated much faster
than conventional trains.
1. BACKGROUND:
MAGLEV PRINCIPLE:
A method of supporting and
transporting objects or vehicles which is based on the physical
property that the force between two magnetized bodies is
inversely proportional to their distance. By using this magnetic
force to counterbalance the gravitational pull, a stable and
contactless suspension between a magnet (magnetic body)
and a fixed guideway (magnetized body) may be obtained. In
magnetic levitation (Maglev), also known as magnetic
suspension, this basic principle is used to suspend (or levitate)
vehicles weighing 40 tons or more by generating a controlled
magnetic force. By removing friction, these vehicles can travel
at speeds higher than wheeled trains, with considerably
improved propulsion efficiency (thrust energy/input energy)
and reduced noise. In Maglev vehicles, chassis-mounted
magnets are either suspended underneath a ferromagnetic
guideway (track) or levitated above an aluminium track.
SAFETY:
>>Are super-conducting magnets really dependable?
Will it be safe to travel by Maglev?
Superconducting magnets are highly
reliable. High-energy accelerators routinely operate with
many hundreds of superconducting magnets positioned along
the path followed by particles that travel in precise orbits
along miles of evacuated tubes. If only one of these many
hundred magnets failed, it would shut down the accelerator
for a long period while the magnet was repaired or replaced.
Such a situation could not be tolerated, and in fact, does not
occur in practice. In the proposed superconducting super
collider (SSC), for example, over 10,000 superconducting
magnets would have been positioned along the 76-kilometer
circumference of the SSC. Failure of one of these magnets
would have shut down the SSC.
The Maglev vehicles are designed
with multiple (typically 16) superconducting magnets that
operate separately and independently of each other. The
vehicle will remain levitated and operate safely even if several
of its magnets were to fail. Because the failure rate of
superconducting magnets is very low, the probability of two
magnets failing in a period of few minutes, the time needed to
reach a stopping point, would be less than once in a million
years of operation. Such a failure rate is much smaller than the
engine failure rate in jet aircraft. Furthermore, the Maglev
vehicle would continue to operate, while the jet aircraft would
not.
REFERENCE:
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maglev#Technology
• www.gluckman.com/Maglev.html
• www.o-keating.com/hsr/maglev.htm
• www.calpoly.edu/~cm/studpage/clottich/phys.html
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maglev#Evaluation
• www.tonmeister.ca/main/textbook/electronics/07.html
• https://bit.ly/3h20bsn