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Quench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector Magnets

An investigation is performed on the quench behavior of a conceptual 50-GJ 8-T high-temperature-superconductor-based solenoid. In this design, a 50-kA conductor-on-round-core cable-in-conduit conductor utilizing ReBCO technology is envisioned, operating at 40 K. Various properties such as resistivit...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Mentink, Matthias, Dudarev, Alexey, Mulder, Tim, Van Nugteren, Jeroen, ten Kate, Herman
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2015.2510078
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2265313
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author Mentink, Matthias
Dudarev, Alexey
Mulder, Tim
Van Nugteren, Jeroen
ten Kate, Herman
author_facet Mentink, Matthias
Dudarev, Alexey
Mulder, Tim
Van Nugteren, Jeroen
ten Kate, Herman
author_sort Mentink, Matthias
collection CERN
description An investigation is performed on the quench behavior of a conceptual 50-GJ 8-T high-temperature-superconductor-based solenoid. In this design, a 50-kA conductor-on-round-core cable-in-conduit conductor utilizing ReBCO technology is envisioned, operating at 40 K. Various properties such as resistivity, thermal conductivity, and heat capacity are very different at this temperature, which affects the quench behavior. It is found that the envisioned conductor is very stable with a minimum quench energy of about 2 kJ. However, the quench propagation velocity is typically about 20 mm/s, so that creating a wide-spread normal zone throughout the coil is very challenging. Moreover, an extraction voltage exceeding 20 kV would be required to ensure a hot-spot temperature below 100 K once a thermal runaway occurs. A novel concept dubbed “rapid quench transformation” is proposed whereby the superconducting conductor is co-wound with a normal conductor to achieve a high degree of inductive coupling. This geometry allows for a significant electric noise reduction, thus enabling low-threshold quench detection. The secondary circuit is connected in series with a stack of diodes, not allowing current transfer during regular operation, but very fast current transfer once a quench is detected. With this approach, the hot-spot temperature can be kept within 20 K of the cold mass temperature at all times, the hot-spot temperature is well below 100 K, and just under 80% of the stored energy can be extracted during a quench.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1600287
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2016
record_format invenio
spelling oai-inspirehep.net-16002872019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1109/TASC.2015.2510078http://cds.cern.ch/record/2265313engMentink, MatthiasDudarev, AlexeyMulder, TimVan Nugteren, Jeroenten Kate, HermanQuench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector MagnetsDetectors and Experimental TechniquesAn investigation is performed on the quench behavior of a conceptual 50-GJ 8-T high-temperature-superconductor-based solenoid. In this design, a 50-kA conductor-on-round-core cable-in-conduit conductor utilizing ReBCO technology is envisioned, operating at 40 K. Various properties such as resistivity, thermal conductivity, and heat capacity are very different at this temperature, which affects the quench behavior. It is found that the envisioned conductor is very stable with a minimum quench energy of about 2 kJ. However, the quench propagation velocity is typically about 20 mm/s, so that creating a wide-spread normal zone throughout the coil is very challenging. Moreover, an extraction voltage exceeding 20 kV would be required to ensure a hot-spot temperature below 100 K once a thermal runaway occurs. A novel concept dubbed “rapid quench transformation” is proposed whereby the superconducting conductor is co-wound with a normal conductor to achieve a high degree of inductive coupling. This geometry allows for a significant electric noise reduction, thus enabling low-threshold quench detection. The secondary circuit is connected in series with a stack of diodes, not allowing current transfer during regular operation, but very fast current transfer once a quench is detected. With this approach, the hot-spot temperature can be kept within 20 K of the cold mass temperature at all times, the hot-spot temperature is well below 100 K, and just under 80% of the stored energy can be extracted during a quench.oai:inspirehep.net:16002872016
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Mentink, Matthias
Dudarev, Alexey
Mulder, Tim
Van Nugteren, Jeroen
ten Kate, Herman
Quench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector Magnets
title Quench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector Magnets
title_full Quench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector Magnets
title_fullStr Quench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector Magnets
title_full_unstemmed Quench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector Magnets
title_short Quench Protection of Very Large, 50-GJ-Class, and High-Temperature-Superconductor-Based Detector Magnets
title_sort quench protection of very large, 50-gj-class, and high-temperature-superconductor-based detector magnets
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2015.2510078
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2265313
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