Title :
High-Performance Simulation of Shielding Current Density in HTS by Constitutive-Relation Relaxation Method
Author :
Kamitani, Atsushi ; Takayama, Teruou ; Ikuno, Soichiro
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Sci. & Eng., Yamagata Univ., Yonezawa, Japan
fDate :
6/1/2011 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The high-performance method has been investigated for calculating the shielding current density in a high-temperature superconducting thin film. After discretized with the finite element method, the initial-boundary-value problem of the shielding current density is transformed to the nonlinear system of ordinary-differential equations. When the Runge-Kutta method with an adaptive step-size control is applied to the system, an overflow might be caused in the step-size correction iteration. In order to suppress the overflow, the constitutive relation is modified so that its solution may satisfy the original relation. This method is called the constitutive-relation relaxation method. A numerical code for analyzing the shielding current density has been developed on the basis of the method and, as an application of the code, the permanent-magnet method for measuring the critical current density has been investigated numerically.
Keywords :
Runge-Kutta methods; critical current density (superconductivity); finite element analysis; high-temperature superconductors; initial value problems; integral equations; iterative methods; nonlinear differential equations; superconducting thin films; Runge-Kutta method; adaptive step-size control; constitutive-relation relaxation method; critical current density; finite element method; high-performance method; high-performance simulation; high-temperature superconducting thin film; initial-boundary-value problem; nonlinear system; numerical code; ordinary-differential equations; permanent-magnet method; shielding current density; step-size correction iteration; Critical current density; Current density; High temperature superconductors; Magnetic noise; Magnetic shielding; Superconducting magnets; Finite element methods; high-temperature superconductors; integral equations; superconducting films;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2010.2077270