Photo taken on Jan. 13, 2021 shows a prototype train using high-temperature superconducting (HTS) maglev technology in the city of Chengdu, southwest China's Sichuan Province. [Photo/Xinhua] |
The domestically developed maglev train boasts a designed
speed of 620 kph, according to Southwest Jiaotong University, one of the
train's designers.
A 165-meter line to test the new train was launched on the
same day.
At the launch ceremony, the 21-meter-long silver-and-black
locomotive was seen floating slowly along the track. Experts hailed the key
development of HTS technology emerging from lab tests in China.
"Although the theory sounds good, everyone saw it (HTS
maglev technology) as a lab toy in the past, without tests in a real
situation," said Deng Zigang, deputy director of the university's research
center for super-high-speed maglev transport in low-pressure tubes.
China has been a world leader in the construction of
high-speed railway. By the end of 2020, the country had 37,900 km of high-speed
rail lines in service, the longest in the world, according to China's railway
operator.
Maglev trains, levitated from the tracks and propelled by
powerful magnets to avoid wheel-rail friction, are designed to break the speed
bottlenecks facing high-speed trains. The country's first commercial maglev
system was put into operation in 2003 in Shanghai. The 30-km stretch between
downtown and the city's Pudong airport is based on German maglev technology of
"electromagnetic suspension" (EMS).
China's first medium-and-low speed maglev line fully
supported by the country's own EMS technology started operations in May 2016 in
Changsha, Hunan Province. It has a design speed of 100 kph.
Involving an investment of 60 million yuan (9.3 million U.S.
dollars), the HTS maglev project was jointly developed by Southwest Jiaotong
University, China Railway Group Limited and CRRC Corporation Limited.
Compared with other maglev technologies, HTS tech is more
suitable for the futuristic concept of superfast transportation in vacuum
tubes, where trains could hit speeds of over 1,000 kph, according to experts.
"The HTS technology can make the train float without
electricity, and it can be moved with just one hand," said Deng.
At the site, a reporter succeeded in moving the 12-tonne
levitated locomotive with one finger.
Wu Zili, a senior engineer with the Southwest Jiaotong
University, said the cost of the (HTS) maglev system is estimated to be slightly
higher than high-speed rail, but the cost is expected to go down further if
mass production of main components is achieved.