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Colin Bennett

Coated conductors for power applications: materials challenges - 0 views

  • This manuscript reports on the recent progress and the remaining materials challenges in the development of coated conductors (CCs) for power applications and magnets, with a particular emphasis on the different initiatives being active at present in Europe. We first summarize the scientific and technological scope where CCs have been raised as a complex technology product and then we show that there exists still much room for performance improvement. The objectives and CC architectures being explored in the scope of the European project EUROTAPES are widely described and their potential in generating novel breakthroughs emphasized. The overall goal of this project is to create synergy among academic and industrial partners to go well beyond the state of the art in several scientific issues related to CCs' enhanced performances and to develop nanoengineered CCs with reduced costs, using high throughput manufacturing processes which incorporate quality control tools and so lead to higher yields. Three general application targets are considered which will require different conductor architectures and performances and so the strategy is to combine vacuum and chemical solution deposition approaches to achieve the targeted goals. A few examples of such approaches are described related to defining new conductor architectures and shapes, as well as vortex pinning enhancement through novel paths towards nanostructure generation. Particular emphasis is made on solution chemistry approaches. We also describe the efforts being made in transforming the CCs into assembled conductors and cables which achieve appealing mechanical and electromagnetic performances for power systems. Finally, we briefly mention some outstanding superconducting power application projects being active at present, in Europe and worldwide, to exemplify the strong advances in reaching the demands to integrate them in a new electrical engineering paradigm.
Colin Bennett

Graphene gets a cousin in the shape of germanene - 1 views

  • Dubbed a 'cousin of graphene', the material, which is made up of just a single layer of germanium atoms, is expected to exhibit impressive electrical and optical properties and could be widely integrated across the electronics industry in the future.
Colin Bennett

Memory alloy bounces back into shape 10 million times - 1 views

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    "The new material - made from nickel, titanium and copper - shatters previous records and is so resilient it could be useful in artificial heart valves, aircraft components or a new generation of solid-state refrigerators."
Colin Bennett

Copper demand rising in both China and Europe - Aurubis - 0 views

  • "After the -- in some instances -- surprisingly high order intake in the traditionally somewhat quieter summer season, the demand for rod, shapes and strip products is now increasing."
Colin Bennett

The Ironton Tribune > Archives > News > TASER: Shock to the system <br> - 0 views

  • A TASER is a non-lethal, gun-shaped device that shoots two metal prongs connected to copper wires into a suspect. The TASER uses the copper wires to generate a 50,000 volt, low amperage electrical current into a person’s muscles and stops voluntary movement. The device turns off after five seconds.
Colin Bennett

Transformer Robots Closer To Reality Than We Think (VIDEO) - 0 views

  • Rob Reid at the US Air Force Research Lab is collaborating with the Carnegie Mellon team to develop even smaller prototype robots. Reid and colleagues can fold flat silicon shapes into 3D forms as little as a few hundred microns diameter. “We will drive those using electric forces too, by patterning circuits and devices into the silicon design,”
Sergio Ferreira

A Green Spaceport? : MetaEfficient - 0 views

  • The plans, revealed in September, show a teardrop-shaped building with high-tech ventilation systems, solar panels, and massive windows, all features that could earn it top certification for efficiency and energy savings by the U.S. Green Building Council.
James Wright

Japan - Cablemakers to increase capital investment in FY2012-13 - 0 views

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    Furukawa Electric Co. Ltd. and Tohoku University Graduate School have jointly introduced a medical application made of copper alloy. This development refers to an apparatus that uses copper shape memory alloy and aims to correct ingrown nails. What the apparatus does is to insert an alloy plate at both sides of the nail correcting its curvature. Tohoku University is currently using the instrument on a pilot basis, however, Furukawa is planning to start selling it within this fiscal year. The company expects to sell a significant volume of the newly developed instrument as about 10 million people in Japan suffer from ingrown nails.
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    Furukawa Magnet Wire Co. Ltd., a subsidiary of Furukawa Electric Group, announced that it has expanded its facility in Malaysia. Production capacity of its TEX-E, trilayer insulated wire, which is principally used in rechargers for computers and mobile phones, has been doubled. The company expects that demand will increase in China and other emerging markets in the medium to long term. In addition, it was reported that Furukawa Electric increased its stake in Chongqing Changhua Automobile Harness Co. Ltd., the China-based wiring harness assembler, to 65% from its previously held 50% share.
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    Four major manufacturers of wire and cable are set to increase their level of capital investment in this fiscal year. The companies are expected to make large investments within emerging country markets, which promise growth over the medium to long term. Another area of investment is the field of smartphone components. Sumitomo Electric Industries Ltd., SWCC Showa Holdings Co. Ltd. and Furukawa Electric Co. Ltd. will expand capital investment "significantly", while Fujikura Ltd., will do so only "slightly".
Colin Bennett

New lighting controller technology - 0 views

  • “We have designed a patented lighting controller that does power shaping on electricity that goes into ballasts,” said David Berg, Cavet’s founder, executive vice president, product management and engineering. “It’s a little smaller than a shoe box, depending on how big your feet are.”
James Wright

Germany - Aurubis posts Q3 results (April - June `11) - sales of copper products rose b... - 0 views

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    Aurubis AG, a leading producer of unwrought copper and copper semis, announced its third quarter results. It reported pre-tax profits to have risen by 41% y-o-y to €111M and total net revenues of €3.294B, up by 32% y-o-y. The company produced 198,000t of copper wirerod, down by 6% y-o-y, whereas production of copper shapes was up by 10% y-o-y, amounting to 55,000t. Within this area, Aurubis' product mix is characterised by an increasing proportion of speciality products. The company noted cooling demand for its copper products during April to June 2011, attributed to seasonal factors.
Colin Bennett

Cu-Ni nano-alloy can be two-faced - 0 views

  • Researchers at the University of Texas at San Antonio say that they have produced a new phase map of the copper-nickel nanoalloy – a technologically important catalyst used in a wide range of industrial processes – that goes a long way in explaining how the size and shape of the nanoparticles affect the alloy’s melting temperature. The map could allow engineers to make specific types of Cu-Ni structures depending on the application required by simply tuning alloy synthesis parameters.
Hans De Keulenaer

Is AI Objectivity Possible in a Biased World? | UL - 1 views

  • Can thinking machines be ethical machines? UL experts David Wroth and Christian Anschuetz discuss the subtle biases shaping the very systems we're dependent upon to transform our future.
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    AI is certainly a disruptive technology, but opinions differ how far it can go. Certainly in rule-based environments (chess, Go), AI seems unbeatable. Some however go as far as to claim that computers will be able to do anything that humans can do, replacing doctors and artists, to name a few.
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