This paper describes the standalone magnet cold testing of the high temperature superconducting (HTS) magnet Feather-M2.1-2. This magnet was constructed within the European funded FP7-EUCARD2 collaboration to test a Roebel type HTS cable, and is one of the first high temperature superconducting dipole magnets in the world. The magnet was operated in forced flow helium gas with temperatures ranging between 5 and 85 K. During the tests a magnetic dipole field of 3.1 T was reached inside the aperture at a current of 6.5 kA and a temperature of 5.7 K. These values are in agreement with the self-field critical current of the used SuperOx cable assembled with Sunam tapes (low-performance batch), thereby confirming that no degradation occurred during winding, impregnation, assembly and cool-down of the magnet. The magnet was quenched many tens of times by ramping over the critical current and no degradation nor training was evident. During the tests the voltage over the coil was monitored in the microvolt range. An inductive cancellation wire was used to remove the inductive component, thereby significantly reducing noise levels. Close to the quench current, drift was detected both in temperature and voltage over the coil. This drifting happens in a time scale of minutes and is a clear indication that the magnet has reached its limit. All quenches happened approximately at the same average electric field and thus none of the quenches occurred unexpectedly.

Powering of an HTS dipole insert-magnet operated standalone in helium gas between 5 and 85 K / J.V. Nugteren, G. Kirby, H. Bajas, M. Bajko, A. Ballarino, L. Bottura, A. Chiuchiolo, P.-. Contat, M. Dhalle, M. Durante, P. Fazilleau, A. Fontalva, P. Gao, W. Goldacker, H.T. Kate, A. Kario, V. Lahtinen, C. Lorin, A. Markelov, J. Mazet, A. Molodyk, J. Murtomaki, N. Long, J. Perez, C. Petrone, F. Pincot, G.D. Rijk, L. Rossi, S. Russenschuck, J. Ruuskanen, K. Schmitz, A. Stenvall, A. Usoskin, G. Willering, Y. Yang. - In: SUPERCONDUCTOR SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY. - ISSN 0953-2048. - 31:6(2018), pp. 065002.1-065002.12. [10.1088/1361-6668/aab887]

Powering of an HTS dipole insert-magnet operated standalone in helium gas between 5 and 85 K

L. Rossi;
2018

Abstract

This paper describes the standalone magnet cold testing of the high temperature superconducting (HTS) magnet Feather-M2.1-2. This magnet was constructed within the European funded FP7-EUCARD2 collaboration to test a Roebel type HTS cable, and is one of the first high temperature superconducting dipole magnets in the world. The magnet was operated in forced flow helium gas with temperatures ranging between 5 and 85 K. During the tests a magnetic dipole field of 3.1 T was reached inside the aperture at a current of 6.5 kA and a temperature of 5.7 K. These values are in agreement with the self-field critical current of the used SuperOx cable assembled with Sunam tapes (low-performance batch), thereby confirming that no degradation occurred during winding, impregnation, assembly and cool-down of the magnet. The magnet was quenched many tens of times by ramping over the critical current and no degradation nor training was evident. During the tests the voltage over the coil was monitored in the microvolt range. An inductive cancellation wire was used to remove the inductive component, thereby significantly reducing noise levels. Close to the quench current, drift was detected both in temperature and voltage over the coil. This drifting happens in a time scale of minutes and is a clear indication that the magnet has reached its limit. All quenches happened approximately at the same average electric field and thus none of the quenches occurred unexpectedly.
cold testing; high temperature superconductors; superconducting accelerator magnets; superconducting magnets
Settore FIS/01 - Fisica Sperimentale
2018
Article (author)
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
pdf.pdf

accesso riservato

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 3.5 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
3.5 MB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/663699
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 41
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 35
social impact