Matthieu Philippe
University of Liège
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Featured researches published by Matthieu Philippe.
Superconductor Science and Technology | 2015
Matthieu Philippe; Mark Douglas Ainslie; Laurent Wera; Jean-François Fagnard; Anthony R. Dennis; Yunhua Shi; D.A. Cardwell; Benoît Vanderheyden; Philippe Vanderbemden
Bulk, high temperature superconductors have significant potential for use as powerful permanent magnets in a variety of practical applications due to their ability to trap record magnetic fields. In this paper, soft ferromagnetic sections are combined with a bulk, large grain Y–Ba–Cu–O high temperature superconductor to form superconductor/ferromagnet hybrid structures. We study how the ferromagnetic sections influence the shape of the profile of the trapped magnetic induction at the surface of each structure and report the surface magnetic flux density measured by Hall probe mapping. These configurations have been modelled using a 2D axisymmetric finite element method based on the H -formulation and the results show excellent qualitative and quantitative agreement with the experimental measurements. The model has also been used to study the magnetic flux distribution and predict the behaviour for other constitutive laws and geometries. The results show that the ferromagnetic material acts as a magnetic shield, but the flux density and its gradient are enhanced on the face opposite to the ferromagnet. The thickness and saturation magnetization of the ferromagnetic material are important and a characteristic ferromagnet thickness d* is derived: below d*, saturation of the ferromagnet occurs, and above d*, a weak thickness-dependence is observed. The influence of the ferromagnet is observed even if its saturation magnetization is lower than the trapped flux density of the superconductor. Conversely, thin ferromagnetic discs can be driven to full saturation even though the outer magnetic field is much smaller than their saturation magnetization.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015
Raphael Egan; Matthieu Philippe; Laurent Wera; Jean-François Fagnard; Benoît Vanderheyden; Anthony R. Dennis; Yunhua Shi; D.A. Cardwell; Philippe Vanderbemden
We report the design and construction of a flux extraction device to measure the DC magnetic moment of large samples (i.e., several cm(3)) at cryogenic temperature. The signal is constructed by integrating the electromotive force generated by two coils wound in series-opposition that move around the sample. We show that an octupole expansion of the magnetic vector potential can be used conveniently to treat near-field effects for this geometrical configuration. The resulting expansion is tested for the case of a large, permanently magnetized, type-II superconducting sample. The dimensions of the sensing coils are determined in such a way that the measurement is influenced by the dipole magnetic moment of the sample and not by moments of higher order, within user-determined upper bounds. The device, which is able to measure magnetic moments in excess of 1 A m(2) (1000 emu), is validated by (i) a direct calibration experiment using a small coil driven by a known current and (ii) by comparison with the results of numerical calculations obtained previously using a flux measurement technique. The sensitivity of the device is demonstrated by the measurement of flux-creep relaxation of the magnetization in a large bulk superconductor sample at liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K).
Journal of Physics D | 2016
P. Stachowiak; J. Mucha; Daria Szewczyk; Yujia Zhai; C. H. Hsu; T. A. Coombs; Jean-François Fagnard; Matthieu Philippe; Philippe Vanderbemden
A great majority of widely used ferrite ceramics exhibit a relatively high temperature of order–disorder phase transition in their magnetic subsystem. For applications related to the magnetization process of superconductors, however, a low value of T c is required. Here we report and analyze in detail the thermal properties of bulk Ti-doped Cu–Zn ferrite ceramics Cu0.3Zn0.7Ti0.04Fe1.96O4 and Mg0.15Cu0.15Zn0.7Ti0.04Fe1.96O4. They are characterized by a Curie temperature in the range 120–170 K and a maximum DC magnetic susceptibility exceeding 20 for the Cu0.3Zn0.7Ti0.04Fe1.96O4 material. The temperature dependence of both the specific heat C p and of the thermal conductivity κ, determined between 2 and 300 K, are found not to exhibit any peculiar feature at the magnetic transition temperature. The low-temperature dependence of both κ and the mean free path of phonons suggests a mesoscopic fractal structure of the grains. From the measured data, the characteristics of thermally actuated waves are estimated. The low magnetic phase transition temperature and suitable thermal parameters make the investigated ferrite ceramics applicable as magnetic wave producers in devices designed for magnetization of high-temperature superconductors.
Journal of Materials Science | 2015
Majid Haghgoo; Ali Akbar Yousefi; Mohammad Jalal Zohouriaan Mehr; Alexandre Léonard; Matthieu Philippe; Philippe Compère; Angélique Léonard; Nathalie Job
Physica C-superconductivity and Its Applications | 2014
Matthieu Philippe; Jean-François Fagnard; Sébastien Kirsch; Z Xu; Anthony R. Dennis; Yunhua Shi; D.A. Cardwell; Benoît Vanderheyden; Philippe Vanderbemden
Archive | 2018
Benoît Vanderheyden; Jean-François Fagnard; Kevin Hogan; Matthieu Philippe; Philippe Vanderbemden
Archive | 2017
Philippe Vanderbemden; Matthieu Philippe; Laurent Wera; Kevin Hogan; Benoît Vanderheyden; Jean-François Fagnard
Symposium de Génie Electrique (SGE 2016) : Electrotechnique du Futur (EF), Electronique de Puissance du Futur (EPF) et Matériaux pour le Génie Electrique (MGE) | 2016
Bashar Gony; Kévin Berger; Bruno Douine; Jean Lévêque; Matthieu Philippe; Benoît Vanderheyden; Philippe Vanderbemnden
Archive | 2016
Philippe Vanderbemden; Jean-François Fagnard; Hervé Caps; Benoît Vanderheyden; Matthieu Philippe
Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2016
Matthieu Philippe; Jean-François Fagnard; Laurent Wera; Mitsuru Morita; S. Nariki; Hidekazu Teshima; Hervé Caps; Benoît Vanderheyden; Philippe Vanderbemden