DocumentCode
1329796
Title
Improving Magnetothermal Stability in High-
Superconducting Strands via the Filament Cut Technique
Author
Takala, E. ; Bordini, B. ; Scheuerlein, C. ; Rossi, L.
Author_Institution
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
Volume
22
Issue
6
fYear
2012
Firstpage
4706205
Lastpage
4706205
Abstract
Magnetothermal instability may affect the performance of high critical current density Nb3Sn strands by quenching the superconductor at current values lower than its critical current. This phenomenon has important implications in the design of next-generation superconducting magnets for accelerators. According to the theory, the strand magnetothermal stability can be improved by changing the current distribution within the strand. In this paper, a technique to improve the conductor stability is presented. It consists in partially cutting the strand´s outer superconducting subelements in the region where the wire is soldered to the copper block that feeds the current. The special cut forces the current to enter into the inner subelements without degrading the current capacity. As a consequence, the stability is increased, which avoids changing the strand critical current or its residual resistivity ratio because current redistribution during an external perturbation is strongly reduced. The experimental results obtained by applying this technique on a 0.8-mm restacked-rod process strand are presented and discussed.
Keywords
accelerator magnets; critical current density (superconductivity); magnetocaloric effects; niobium alloys; superconducting magnets; superconducting materials; thermal stability; tin alloys; Nb3Sn; critical current density; current redistribution; external perturbation; filament cut technique; high-Jc Nb3Sn superconducting strands; magnetothermal stability improvement; outer superconducting subelements; quenching; residual resistivity ratio; restacked-rod process strand; size 0.8 mm; strand critical current; superconducting magnets; Accelerator magnets; Current distribution; Niobium-tin; Superconducting magnets; Thermal stability; Stability; superconducting filaments and wires;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1051-8223
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TASC.2012.2220134
Filename
6342918
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