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Superconductor Simulation — Type-II, Critical State & AC Losses

Bean critical state model, E-J power law for Type-II superconductors, HTS tape modeling, AC losses in coils, and quench analysis in superconducting magnets.

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Quick Explainer

🧑‍🎓 Student

What makes superconductor simulation fundamentally different from regular magnetics FEM?

🎓 Engineer

Conventional conductors obey Ohm's law: J = sigma*E. Type-II superconductors have a highly nonlinear E-J relationship modeled as E = Ec*(J/Jc)^n with n=20-50. This extreme nonlinearity means flux penetrates according to the Bean critical state model — very different from skin-effect eddy currents. The nonlinearity makes convergence challenging.

🧑‍🎓 Student

What are AC losses in superconducting coils and why do they matter cryogenically?

🎓 Engineer

Although DC resistance is zero, AC losses occur due to magnetic flux motion in Type-II superconductors. Even milliwatts of loss in LHC magnets or MRI coils are significant because cryogenic cooling efficiency is very low — 1W of cooling at 4K requires roughly 300W of electrical input. Minimizing AC losses drives the geometry of Rutherford cables and HTS tape stack designs.