The story "Prince Ahmed and the
Fairy," one of the classic tales in The Thousand and One Nights, tells
of a prince who flew from place to place on a magic carpet, supported by
invisible forces. The modem version of the magic carpet is the magnetically
levitated train, or maglev, which can travel faster and more efficiently
than ordinary trains because it rides on air instead of steel rails. The
concept took off in the late 1960s, when Gordon T. Danby and James R. Powell
of Brookhaven National Laboratory proposed using superconducting coils to
produce the magnetic fields that would levitate the trains. In the 1970s and
1980s demonstration maglevs were built in Germany and Japan. Yet despite the
appeal of the technology, which promises smooth-as-silk train rides at
speeds up to 500 kilometers per hour, no full-scale commercially operating
maglev system has been constructed.
Why is this so? For one, the maglevs that have been demonstrated so far
are much more expensive and complex than conventional railways. The Japanese
system, for example, requires costly cryogenic equipment on the train cars
to cool the superconducting Coils, which must be kept below about five
kelvins to operate efficiently. The German maglev uses conventional
electromagnets rather than superconducting ones, but the system is
inherently unstable because it is based on magnetic attraction rather than
repulsion. Each train car must be equipped with sensors and feedback
circuits to maintain the separation between the car's electromagnets and the
track. What is more, neither system is fail-safe. A breakdown of the magnet
control circuits or power systems could lead to a sudden loss of levitation
while the train is moving. Careful design can minimize the hazards of such a
failure but not without a further increase in cost and complexity.
All Aboard the Inductrack
At Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, we are exploring a different
approach to magnetic levitation, one that could be simpler and less
expensive to implement. The idea arose from earlier research on an
electromechanical battery for cars and trucks. Such a battery stores kinetic
energy using a flywheel, which requires nearly frictionless magnetic
bearings to minimize energy loss. The bearings developed at Livermore
employed cylindrical magnet arrays to stabilize the levitation of the
flywheel. We soon realized that if we unrolled these stabilizers, we would
have the basis for a new type of maglev.