A section of superconducting wire carries a current of 90 A and requires 1.10 L
ID: 1628980 • Letter: A
Question
A section of superconducting wire carries a current of 90 A and requires 1.10 L of liquid nitrogen per hour to keep it below its critical temperature. For it to be economically advantageous to use a superconducting wire, the cost of cooling the wire must be less than the cost of energy lost to heat in the wire. Assume that the cost of liquid nitrogen is $0.30 per liter, and that electric energy costs $0.10 per kW·h. What is the resistance in of a normal wire that costs as much in wasted electric energy as the cost of liquid nitrogen for the superconductor?
Explanation / Answer
Here the the two costs per hour are same,
1.10*0.30 = 90^2 *R*0.10/1000
1.1*0.3*1000/(0.1*90^2) =R
R = 0.4074 ohm answer
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