SCMaglev explained

The SCMaglev (superconducting maglev, formerly called the MLU) is a magnetic levitation (maglev) railway system developed by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) and the Railway Technical Research Institute.[1] [2] [3]

The SCMaglev uses an electrodynamic suspension (EDS) system for levitation, guidance, and propulsion.

In development since the 1960s, the SCMaglev system will be used in the Chūō Shinkansen rail line between Tokyo and Nagoya, Japan. The line, currently under construction, is scheduled to open in 2027. JR Central is also seeking to sell or license the technology to foreign rail companies.The L0 Series, a prototype vehicle based on SCMaglev technology, holds the record for fastest crewed rail vehicle with a record speed of 603km/h.[4]

Technology

The SCMaglev system uses an electrodynamic suspension (EDS) system. The train's bogies have superconducting magnets installed, and the guideways contain two sets of metal coils.The current levitation system uses a series of coils wound into a "figure 8" along both walls of the guideway. These coils are cross-connected underneath the track.

As the train accelerates, the magnetic fields of its superconducting magnets induce a current into these coils due to the magnetic field induction effect. If the train were centered with the coils, the electrical potential would be balanced and no currents would be induced. However, as the train runs on rubber wheels at relatively low speeds, the magnetic fields are positioned below the center of the coils, causing the electrical potential to no longer be balanced. This creates a reactive magnetic field opposing the superconducting magnet's pole (in accordance with Lenz's law), and a pole above that attracts it. Once the train reaches 1500NaN0, there is sufficient current flowing to lift the train 1000NaN0 above the guideway.

These coils also generate guiding and stabilizing forces. Because they are cross-connected underneath the guideway, if the train moves off-center, currents are induced into the connections that correct its positioning.SCMaglev also uses a linear synchronous motor (LSM) propulsion system, which powers a second set of coils in the guideway.

History

Japanese National Railways (JNR) began research on a linear propulsion railway system in 1962 with the goal of developing a train that could travel between Tokyo and Osaka in one hour.[5] Shortly after Brookhaven National Laboratory patented superconducting magnetic levitation technology in the United States in 1969, JNR announced development of its own superconducting maglev (SCMaglev) system. The railway made its first successful SCMaglev run on a short track at its Railway Technical Research Institute in 1972.[6] JR Central plans on exporting the technology, pitching it to potential buyers.[7]

Miyazaki test track

In 1977, SCMaglev testing moved to a new 7 km test track in Hyūga, Miyazaki. By 1980, the track was modified from a "reverse-T" shape to the "U" shape used today. In April 1987, JNR was privatized, and Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central) took over SCMaglev development.

In 1989, JR Central decided to build a better testing facility with tunnels, steeper gradients, and curves. After the company moved maglev tests to the new facility, the company's Railway Technical Research Institute began to allow testing of ground effect trains, an alternate technology based on aerodynamic interaction between the train and the ground, at the Miyazaki Test Track in 1999.

Yamanashi maglev test line

Construction of the Yamanashi maglev test line began in 1990. The 18.4km (11.4miles) "priority section" of the line in Tsuru, Yamanashi, opened in 1997. MLX01 trains were tested there from 1997 to fall 2011, when the facility was closed to extend the line to 42.8km (26.6miles) and to upgrade it to commercial specifications.[8]

Commercial use

Japan

In 2009, Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism decided that the SCMaglev system was ready for commercial operation. In 2011, the ministry gave JR Central permission to operate the SCMaglev system on their planned Chūō Shinkansen linking Tokyo and Nagoya by 2027, and to Osaka by 2037. Construction is currently underway.

United States

Since 2010, JR Central has promoted the SCMaglev system in international markets, particularly the Northeast Corridor of the United States, as the Northeast Maglev. In 2013, Prime Minister Shinzō Abe met with U.S. President Barack Obama and offered to provide the first portion of the SC Maglev track free, a distance of about .[9] In 2016, the Federal Railroad Administration awarded $27.8 million to the Maryland Department of Transportation to prepare preliminary engineering and NEPA analysis for an SCMaglev train between Baltimore, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.[10]

Australia

In late 2015, JR Central, Mitsui, and General Electric in Australia formed a joint venture named Consolidated Land and Rail Australia to provide a commercial funding model using private investors that could build the SC Maglev (linking Sydney, Canberra, and Melbourne), create eight new self-sustaining inland cities linked to the high-speed connection, and contribute to the community.[11] [12]

Vehicles

No.TypeNoteBuilt
MLX01-1Kōfu-end car with double-cusp headDisplayed at the SCMaglev and Railway Park1995
MLX01-11Standard intermediate car
MLX01-2Tokyo-end car with aero-wedge head
MLX01-3Kōfu-end car with aero-wedge headDisplayed at the Railway Technical Research Institute1997
MLX01-21Long intermediate car
MLX01-12Standard intermediate car
MLX01-4Tokyo-end car with double-cusp head
MLX01-901AKōfu-end car with long headRemodeled and renamed from MLX01-901 in 20092002
MLX01-22ALong intermediate carRemodeled and renamed from MLX01-22 in 2009

Records

Manned records

Speed [km/h (mph)] Train TypeLocation Date Comments
60km/h ML100 Maglev RTRI of JNR 1972
400.8km/h MLU001 Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track February 1987 Two-car train set. Former world speed record for maglev trains.
394.3km/h MLU002 Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track November 1989 Single-car
411km/h MLU002N Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track February 1995 Single-car
531km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line, Japan 12 December 1997 Three-car train set. Former world speed record for maglev trains.
552km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line 14 April 1999 Five-car train set. Former world speed record for maglev trains.
581km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line 2 December 2003 Three-car train set. Former world speed record for all trains.
590km/h Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line 16 April 2015 Seven-car train set.[13] Former world speed record for all trains.
603km/h L0 series Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line 21 April 2015 Seven-car train set. Current world speed record for all trains.

Unmanned records

Speed [km/h (mph)] Train TypeLocation Date Comments
504km/h ML-500 Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track 12 December 1979
517km/h ML-500 Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track 21 December 1979
352.4km/h MLU001 Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track January 1986 Three-car train set
405.3km/h MLU001 Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track January 1987 Two-car train set
431km/h MLU002N Maglev Miyazaki Maglev Test Track February 1994 Single-car
550km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line 24 December 1997 Three-car train set
548km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line 18 March 1999 Five-car train set

Relative passing speed records

Speed [km/h (mph)]Train TypeLocation Date Comments
966km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line December 1998 Former world relative passing speed record
1003km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line November 1999 Former world relative passing speed record
1026km/h MLX01 Maglev Yamanashi Maglev Test Line 16 November 2004 Current world relative passing speed record

See also

References

Further reading

External links

35.5833°N 194°W

Notes and References

  1. Book: Test Ride of Superconducting Maglev by the US Secretary of Transportation, Mr. Ray LaHood . Central Japan Railway Company . 11 May 2010 .
  2. Web site: Central Japan Railway Company Annual Report 2012 . 23–25 . Central Japan Railway Company . 2012 . 23 July 2013.
  3. Study of Japanese Electrodynamic-Suspension Maglev Systems . 10150166 . NASA Sti/Recon Technical Report N . 94 . 37515 . Argonne National Laboratory. 1994. 10.2172/10150166. J.L. . He . D.M. . Rote . H.T. . Coffey. 1994STIN...9437515H .
  4. News: Japan's Maglev Train Breaks World Speed Record with 600 km/h Test Run. Justin . McCurry. 21 April 2015 . The Guardian. New York . U.S..
  5. The airline distance between Tokyo and Osaka is 397 kilometres (247 mi). To achieve an average speed of 397 km/h, such a train would need to be capable of speeds in excess of 500 km/h to allow for acceleration and deceleration times, intermediate stops, and additional distance incurred by a land route.
  6. Web site: History. USJMAGLEV. U.S.-Japan Maglev. 2012. 26 December 2014. 28 July 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140728110724/http://usjmaglev.com/usjmaglev/History.html. dead.
  7. Web site: Japanese rail company eyes exports to cover maglev costs. Nikkei Asian Review.
  8. Book: http://english.jr-central.co.jp/company/company/others/data-book/_pdf/2012.pdf. Central Japan Railway Company . Data Book 2012. The Chuo Shinkansen Using the Superconducting Maglev System. 24–25. 2012.
  9. News: Pfanner . Eric . 19 November 2013 . Japan Pitches Its High-Speed Train With an Offer to Finance . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230710015937/https://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/19/business/international/japan-pitches-americans-on-its-maglev-train.html . 10 July 2023 . The New York Times . B8 . New York.
  10. Web site: Baltimore-Washington Superconducting Maglev Project - Background.
  11. Web site: General Electric, Japan Rail and Mitsui all aboard high-speed rail proposal. 2016-05-12. Financial Review. en-US. 2016-06-22.
  12. Web site: Consolidated Land and Rail Australia Pty Ltd. www.clara.com.au. 2016-06-22.
  13. Web site: http://www.sankei.com/economy/news/150416/ecn1504160038-n1.html. ja: リニアが世界最速590キロ 長距離走行記録も更新. Maglev sets new world record of 590 km/h - Also sets new distance record. 16 April 2015. Sankei News. The Sankei Shimbun & Sankei Digital. Japan. ja. https://web.archive.org/web/20150416093721/http://www.sankei.com/economy/news/150416/ecn1504160038-n1.html. 16 April 2015. 16 April 2015. dead.