Title :
Detect-and-Activate-the-Heater Protection Technique for YBCO Coils
Author :
Kim, Woo-Seok ; Trillaud, Frederic ; Ahn, Min Cheol ; Iwasa, Yukikazu ; Peng, Xuan ; Tomsic, Michael
Author_Institution :
Francis Bitter Magn. Lab., MIT, Cambridge, MA
fDate :
6/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper presents the results of work, experimental and simulation, performed on an YBCO pancake coil to develop a detect-and-activate-the-heater (DAH) protection technique. In this DAH protection technique a ldquoprotection heaterrdquo (PH) is activated, upon the detection of a quench zone in a coil, to create an additional normal zone to absorb the stored magnetic energy sufficient to keep the initially quenched zone (hot spot) from overheating. It is computed that a protection heater for most coils needs to cover only a fraction of the winding to keep the quenched zone from overheating. The pancake coil used in the experiment, 100-mm i.d., 190-mm o.d., and 4.3-mm height, is dry-wound with copper plated YBCO tape, 4.3-mm wide, 96.3- mum thick, 100-m long, and is turn-to-turn insulated with 38 mum thick Nomex spacer. The pancake stores a magnetic energy of 30 J at an operating current of 80 A at 65 K. Because the smaller the magnet size, the less applicable the assumption of adiabatic conditions is and also the more beneficial NZP becomes that would otherwise be negligible in ldquolargerdquo magnets, the hot spot temperature observed in the experiment with this ldquosmallrdquo test coil was much less than that computed based on the assumptions of adiabatic conditions and no NZP. To validate the basic concept and consequences of DAH protection technique either a test coil has to be large or if the same coil is to be used, it should be tested at the temperature range close to 20-30 K so that the coil can carry a large current and thus store a large magnetic energy.
Keywords :
barium compounds; copper; high-temperature superconductors; quenching (thermal); superconducting coils; superconducting magnet energy storage; superconducting magnets; superconducting tapes; windings; yttrium compounds; Nomex spacer; YBCO pancake coil; YBCO-Cu; adiabatic process; copper plated YBCO tape; current 80 A; detect-and-activate-the-heater protection; magnetic energy storage; overheating; quench zone; size 100 m; size 100 mm; size 190 mm; size 38 mum; size 4.3 mm; size 96.3 mum; stored magnetic energy; temperature 20 K to 30 K; temperature 65 K; winding; Overheating; YBCO pancake coil; protection;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2008.922353