Title :
Stability criteria for cable-in-conduit superconducting cables for steady or slow pulse operation
Author_Institution :
ITER Int. Team, Naka, Japan
fDate :
6/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In the design of CIC conductors using NbTi or Nb3Sn strands cooled with supercritical He, the choice of stability criteria for near steady state operation presents a problem. The disturbances are small, under 10 mJ/cm3of cable material, too small for design significance. The main parameters affected by the choice of stability criteria are temperature margin and Cu:nonCu ratio, both of which strongly affect cable cost and overall current density. Methods quantifying the copper required for stability have been elementary, mostly using cryogenic stability (the well-cooled condition). Recent experimental and analytical work on the electric field achieved before quench Eq suggest a more exact method. Cable quench is modeled by a simple stability simulation, including copper conduction and the superconducting transition. A heat transfer coefficient is derived from ITER model coil data. As an example it is applied to conductor design for the ITER fusion reactor magnets.
Keywords :
copper; critical current density (superconductivity); fusion reactors; heat transfer; niobium alloys; quenching (thermal); superconducting cables; superconducting transitions; thermal stability; tin alloys; titanium alloys; CIC conductors; Cu:nonCu ratio; ITER model coil; Nb3Sn; NbTi; cable cost; cable material; cable quench; cable-in-conduit superconducting cables; copper conduction; cryogenic stability; current density; electric field; fusion reactor magnets; heat transfer coefficient; slow pulse operation; stability criteria; stability simulation; steady pulse operation; steady state operation; superconducting transition; supercritical He; temperature margin; Conducting materials; Copper; Fusion reactor design; Helium; Niobium compounds; Stability criteria; Superconducting cables; Superconducting coils; Tin; Titanium compounds; Conductor design criteria; quench; stability;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2004.830576