Inductrack Passive
Magnetic Levitation
PERMANENT MAGNETS under an Inductrack
train car are arranged in a Halbach array (above) so that the magnetic-field
lines reinforce one another below the array but cancel one another out above
it. When moving, the magnets induce currents in the track's circuits, which
produce an electromagnetic field that repels the array, thus levitating the
train car. Halbach arrays can also provide lateral stability if they
are deployed alongside the track's circuits (below).
Called the Inductrack, the new system is passive in that it uses no
superconducting magnets or powered electromagnets. Instead it uses permanent
room-temperature magnets, similar to the familiar bar magnet, only more
powerful. On the underside of each train car is a flat, rectangular array of
magnetic bars called a Halbach array. (It is named after its inventor, Klaus
Halbach, a retired Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory physicist.) The
bars are arranged in a special pattern, so that the magnetic orientation of
each bar is at right angles to the orientations of the adjacent bars [see
top illustration on this page]. When the bars are placed in this
configuration, the magnetic-field lines combine to produce a very strong
field below the array. Above the array, the field lines cancel one another
out.
The second critical element is the track, which is embedded with closely
packed coils of insulated wire. Each coil is a closed circuit, resembling a
rectangular window frame. The Inductrack, as its name suggests, produces
levitating force by inducing electric currents in the track. Moving a
permanent magnet near a loop of wire will cause a current to flow in the
wire, as English physicist Michael Faraday discovered in 1831. When the
Inductrack's train cars move forward, the magnets in the Halbach arrays
induce currents in the track's coils, which in turn generate an
electromagnetic field that repels the arrays. As long as the train is moving
above a low critical speed of a few kilometers per hour-a bit faster than
walking speed-the Halbach arrays will be levitated a few centimeters above
the track's surface.
The magnetic field acts much like a compressed spring: the levitating
force increases exponentially as the separation between the track and the
train car decreases. This property makes the Inductrack inherently stable-it
can easily adjust to an increasing load or to acceleration forces from
rounding a bend in the track. Thus, the system would not require control
circuits to maintain the levitation of the train cars. All the train would
need is some source of drive power to accelerate it.
In the past, engineers believed permanent magnets could not be used in
maglev systems, because they would yield too little levitating force
relative to their weight. The Inductrack's combination of Halbach arrays and
closely packed track coils, however, results in levitation forces
approaching the theoretical maximum force per unit area that can be exerted
by permanent magnets. Calculations show that by using high-field
alloys-neodymium-iron-boron, for example-it is possible to achieve
levitating forces on the order of 40 metric tons per square meter with
magnet arrays that weigh as little as 800 kilograms per square meter, or one
fiftieth of the weight levitated.
In a full-scale Inductrack system, the track would consist of two rows of
tightly packed rectangular coils, each corresponding to one of the steel
rails in a conventional track. The main levitating Halbach arrays would be
placed on the underside of the train car so that they would run just above
the rows of coils [see the second illustration on this page]. Smaller
Halbach arrays could be deployed alongside the rows of coils to provide
lateral stability for the train car. Such a configuration would somewhat
resemble its counterpart in an ordinary train-namely, a flanged wheel
rolling on a steel rail. In the Inductrack the role of the
"flanges" is played by the small side-mounted Halbach arrays,
whereas the role of the "wheel" is fulfilled by the main
levitating arrays.