“…In recent years, advances in the development of high-temperature superconducting coils with rare-earth barium-copper oxide (REBCO)-coated conductors have drawn significant attention by the community of researchers in applied superconductivity, thanks to the vast progress in the technology of thin films that has enabled the fabrication of the second generation of high-temperature superconducting (2G-HTS) tapes in the past decade. Thence, the formulation of modelling tools for describing the electromagnetic and thermal properties of such 2G-HTS tapes and their use in high-power-density coils for applications such as superconducting fault current limiters [1,2,3], transformers [4,5], power generators [6,7,8], motors [9,10,11,12], energy storage systems [13,14,15], permanent magnets [16,17], and magnetic imaging machines [18,19] is currently a motivating force of intensive research due to the inherent complexity of the material law that governs the electrical properties of the superconducting compound, the computational challenges that are imposed by the large cross-sectional aspect ratio of the 2G-HTS tape, and ultimately, the actual size of the coils that need to be modelled before investing in usually large and customised cryogenic facilities for their experimental testing.…”