China has become a world leader in
high-speed railway technology with its development of a cutting-edge permanent
magnet synchronous traction system that will take bullet trains to an ultrafast
500 kilometers per hour.
The advanced 690-kilowatt traction
system was developed by CRRC Corp, the country's train-making behemoth, at its
Zhuzhou Institute in Hunan province. It will soon enter mass production, said
Ding Rongjun, a member of the Chinese Academy of Engineering who heads the
institute.
"Now we have our own permanent
magnet synchronous traction system with full intellectual property rights,
marking a new chapter in China's high-speed railways," he said, adding
that only a handful of countries are capable of manufacturing the sophisticated
apparatus, including Germany and Japan.
Feng Jianghua, deputy director of
the institute, said the adoption of the technology will reshape the high-speed
railway industry because traction equipment is the most important part of a
bullet train.
Currently, most high-speed trains in
service in the world are propelled by alternating current asynchronous motors,
a traction system first developed in the 1970s.
The Zhuzhou Institute began research
and development on permanent magnet synchronous traction technology in 2003
after it noticed that major international train makers, such as Siemens and
Bombardier, had launched projects to acquire the equipment, Feng told China
Economic Weekly.
The magazine quoted Xu Junfeng, a
senior engineer at the institute, as saying that engineers overcame a large
number of technical difficulties. China had never looked at the high-tech
equipment before the project.
After eight years, engineers
completed development in 2011 and installed the advanced traction system on
trains running on Subway Line 2 in Shenyang, Liaoning province, as a trial.
The test has proved successful, Xu
said.
In December 2013, the institute
brought the system to bullet trains, expecting speeds of 500 km/h. Trials were
undertaken on several trains in October.
Jia Limin of Beijing Jiaotong
University, who heads China's high-speed railway innovation programme, said
that if everything goes well, trains equipped with the new traction system will
become fully operational by 2018.
Compared with an alternating current
asynchronous motor, the new system boasts more power, simpler configuration and
lower electrical consumption, Jia said.
"The new system has fewer parts
than the current traction apparatus, so it is more reliable and
efficient," he said.
Sheng Guangzu, general manager of
China Railway Corp, has pledged to speed up the development of key technologies
in high-speed rail and to design a new bullet train using Chinese standards.
Source: AsiaOne
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