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Hans De Keulenaer

Aluminum wiring poses risks to home and sale - Los Angeles Times - 0 views

  • Would you recommend that I upgrade the wire ends? If I do nothing, do you think the aluminum wiring may be a deal breaker?
  • Aluminum wiring has been the cause of numerous house fires. This is because the wire connections at outlets, lights, switches and breakers can become loose, and these slack fittings are prone to overheating. The recommended upgrade for aluminum wire connections is to add copper wire ends, commonly known as pigtails, and to secure these to the aluminum wires with connectors that are specifically designed for this purpose.
Hans De Keulenaer

New Haven Independent: Copper-Robber Stopper Approved - 0 views

  • The City Plan Commission gave its approval on Wednesday night to a new ordinance amendment on metal recycling in New Haven. The proposal, put forward by Alderwoman Jacqueline James (pictured), would require buyers and sellers of scrap metal to obtain a license from the city and to keep records of all scrap metal transactions.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Briefing Room » Superconductive Power Distribution Project Comes of Age - 0 views

  • On Feb. 6, 2009, Southwire Company and its partners mark the two-and-a-half year anniversary of an urban power distribution project using high-temperature superconductor— known as HTS Triax® Superconducting Cable systems.The installation in Groveport, OH used about 200 meters (600 feet) of Southwire’s HTS Triax Superconducting Cable to distribute electric power to 8,600 homes and businesses through American Electric Power’s Bixby substation. In addition to American Electric Power (AEP), project partners included American Superconductor, the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory, and Praxair.
Hans De Keulenaer

IBM's Infinite Research Problem - Forbes.com - 0 views

  • Copper wire, the current conductor of choice on a chip, is relatively fast, but not nearly as fast and energy-efficient as light. Electrons race across copper in the best systems at two to five gigabits of data per second; photons "imprinted" on a laser beam can move at five times that rate.
Hans De Keulenaer

Electrical Contractor: Branch-Circuit, Feed and Service Calculations, Part XXXIII - 0 views

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    copper-clad aluminum is treated in the NEC as aluminum, which probably makes sense
Hans De Keulenaer

Science magazine names top 10 breakthroughs of 2008 - 0 views

  • New Class of High-T Superconductors: since the discovery of high-temperature superconductors in 1986, all had been a ceramic made up of lanthanum-barium-copper oxides. Earlier this year, there was a flurry of papers from a number of research groups that announced they had found a new class of high-temperature superconductors, ceramics made of lanthanum, iron, arsenic, oxygen, and fluorine. While their critical temperature is, by high-temperature superconducting standards, a not-so-hot 55 K, they have opened a new pathway into the mystery of superconductor research. Follow up work hasn't been able to determine whether these materials behave the same as their more familiar cuprate cousins.
Hans De Keulenaer

The Cutting Edge News - 0 views

  • The challenge is to find the right materials. The best structural metals in terms of resistance to hydrogen embrittlement are copper, aluminum, and stainless steel. Copper and stainless steel are relatively expensive and function well in some applications, while inexpensive, durable aluminum would make up the bulk of the metal in any long distance pipeline. The best plastic is high density polyethylene, one of the most common plastics made today.
Hans De Keulenaer

TOP TEN PHYSICS STORIES OF THE YEAR -- Physics News Update 879 - 0 views

  • The new iron-arsenic materials are the first relatively high-temperature materials that remain superconducting above a temperature of 50 K that don't contain copper; the copper materials are brittle.
Hans De Keulenaer

Elastomeric Conductors and Shields - Patent Application 20090314510 - 0 views

  • Systems and methods presented herein provide for elastic conductors. The elastic conductors may be configured with a primary that includes an elastic material and a conductive material. For example, the primary may have an elastic fiber, such as spandex, with a conductive material, such as a braided metal wire, wrapped thereabout. Alternatively, the primary may be configured from an elastic material with a conductive material, such as certain nanopartiuclates, embedded therein. The elastic conductors may be used in a variety of ways to form various types of cables. For example, the elastic conductors may be configured to form coaxial cables, USB cables, twisted pairs, etc. The elastic and flexible nature of the cables may make their uses advantageous in wiring environments that are subjected to strain or other harsh conditions. Moreover, the relatively light weight of the cables may make their uses more advantageous in transportation (e.g., aircraft, automobiles, etc.).
Hans De Keulenaer

Cable with a central conductor of aluminum - US Patent Application 20070000127 Description - 0 views

  • [0003] Mainly for reasons of saving weight, cables having a central conductor made of copper, a metal which is a very good conductor of electricity, are often replaced by cables in which the central conductor is made of aluminum that is covered in a layer of copper, with the copper layer constituting about 15% of the diameter of the cable while the aluminum thus occupies about 85% of the diameter of the cable.
Hans De Keulenaer

Segmented stator technology | Machine Design - 0 views

  • Paul Murphy from Moog explains the concept of boosting copper density using segmented stator technology to Lee Teschler of MACHINE DESIGN. 6:34
Hans De Keulenaer

Scoop: Science Minister salutes super NZ technology - 0 views

  • The New Zealand-made high temperature superconductor carries up to 10 times the current of copper wire of the same size, without energy loss. In a world-first, the New Zealand scientists have produced commercially viable superconductor wire and cable – reliable, robust and economical. It consists of strips of a new material thinner than paint and sheathed in metal.
Hans De Keulenaer

Electrical joint compound - US Patent 4214121 Description - 0 views

  • Heretofore, joining large aluminum underground power cable to aluminum or copper power cable with compression connectors was not feasible because of premature failure of the connector joint under electrical current loading. Unlike the long andbulky compression connectors used on bare overhead power lines where space is not a premium, underground compression connectors must be short to keep manhole size small and to reduce the time required to insulate the joint with hand-wrapped tape or otherinsulating materials. Overhead line connectors receieve appreciable cooling from air currents whereas commonly used paper or plastic insulation restricts the cooling of underground cable joints. Metal particle-filled grease joint compounds used inoverhead line compression connectors are not used for underground cable for several reasons. First, its use is precluded because of the possiblity of migration of the compound into the paper or along the insulation resulting in voltage puncture of theinsulation from ionization. Secondly, joint compounds of grease do not offer much improvement over no compound because grease will move under pressure and therefore does not constrain relative movement of connector and conductor strands whereashardenable resins such as epoxy do.
Hans De Keulenaer

Get Your Car A New Engine ~ UQM Electric Motor and Drive Train by Daniel - Gaia Community - 0 views

  • The typical architecture of a UQM® motor consists of a stator winding employing a high pole count configuration, which allows for high copper utilization (minimizing energy loss and cost), and a hollow rotor upon which powerful rare earth permanent magnets are mounted on the outer circumference.
Hans De Keulenaer

EETimes.com - Plastic wires rival copper at 20 percent the weight - 0 views

  • PORTLAND, Ore.— ElectriPlast conductive polymer enables wiring that is 80 percent lighter than copper and yet has the same conductivity, according to its inventors Integral Technologies (Bellingham, Wash.).
Hans De Keulenaer

Ultra Conductive Copper-Carbon Nanotube Wire - 0 views

  • The most common traditional materials used in electrical energy distribution systems are copper and copper alloys.
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