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New bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications

A few hundred temperature sensors are used to monitor the temperature behavior of the gigantic ATLAS toroid superconducting magnet system during cool down and normal operation. In order to guarantee good sensitivity of temperature measurements in the range from liquid helium to room temperature, two...

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Autores principales: Dudarev, Alexey, Bremer, Johan, Mentink, Matthias, Mulder, Tim, ter Harmsel, Jeroen, ten Kate, Herman H J
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2017.2782212
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2306356
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author Dudarev, Alexey
Bremer, Johan
Mentink, Matthias
Mulder, Tim
ter Harmsel, Jeroen
ten Kate, Herman H J
author_facet Dudarev, Alexey
Bremer, Johan
Mentink, Matthias
Mulder, Tim
ter Harmsel, Jeroen
ten Kate, Herman H J
author_sort Dudarev, Alexey
collection CERN
description A few hundred temperature sensors are used to monitor the temperature behavior of the gigantic ATLAS toroid superconducting magnet system during cool down and normal operation. In order to guarantee good sensitivity of temperature measurements in the range from liquid helium to room temperature, two types of sensors are positioned at the same location: platinum resistance thermometers for the range 30–300 K and carbon composition resistors (Allen-Bradley) for the 4–30 K range. Both types are very well known for use in cryogenics and they have performed satisfactorily during 10 year of ATLAS operation. The sensors themselves are easily available and inexpensive and the main cost is for the many kilometers of cold and warm instrumentation cables, connectors, conditioners, and installation work. A reduction of the amount of measurement channels is an important issue and this motivated us to develop a new compact and robust sensor module covering the entire temperature range that would combine advantages of both platinum and carbon resistors. The solution is trivial, elegant, and simple. Two resistors with positive temperature derivative and two resistors with negative temperature derivative are connected in a full-bridge connection. We used two platinum and two carbon resistors. The output signal is a result of the subtraction of voltages across positive and negative temperature derivative resistors that makes this temperature bridge sensor very sensitive for the entire temperature range. Variable temperature characterization tests were performed in the helium gas environment in the CERN Cryogenic Laboratory. Our measurements have demonstrated that the bridge sensors have a full range sensitivity better than 0.1 mV/K at a supply current of 100 $\mu$ A. In the meantime, a few other superconducting detector magnets in experiments operating at CERN are equipped with these new, simple, and robust temperature sensors.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1650743
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2018
record_format invenio
spelling oai-inspirehep.net-16507432019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1109/TASC.2017.2782212http://cds.cern.ch/record/2306356engDudarev, AlexeyBremer, JohanMentink, MatthiasMulder, Timter Harmsel, Jeroenten Kate, Herman H JNew bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applicationsDetectors and Experimental TechniquesA few hundred temperature sensors are used to monitor the temperature behavior of the gigantic ATLAS toroid superconducting magnet system during cool down and normal operation. In order to guarantee good sensitivity of temperature measurements in the range from liquid helium to room temperature, two types of sensors are positioned at the same location: platinum resistance thermometers for the range 30–300 K and carbon composition resistors (Allen-Bradley) for the 4–30 K range. Both types are very well known for use in cryogenics and they have performed satisfactorily during 10 year of ATLAS operation. The sensors themselves are easily available and inexpensive and the main cost is for the many kilometers of cold and warm instrumentation cables, connectors, conditioners, and installation work. A reduction of the amount of measurement channels is an important issue and this motivated us to develop a new compact and robust sensor module covering the entire temperature range that would combine advantages of both platinum and carbon resistors. The solution is trivial, elegant, and simple. Two resistors with positive temperature derivative and two resistors with negative temperature derivative are connected in a full-bridge connection. We used two platinum and two carbon resistors. The output signal is a result of the subtraction of voltages across positive and negative temperature derivative resistors that makes this temperature bridge sensor very sensitive for the entire temperature range. Variable temperature characterization tests were performed in the helium gas environment in the CERN Cryogenic Laboratory. Our measurements have demonstrated that the bridge sensors have a full range sensitivity better than 0.1 mV/K at a supply current of 100 $\mu$ A. In the meantime, a few other superconducting detector magnets in experiments operating at CERN are equipped with these new, simple, and robust temperature sensors.oai:inspirehep.net:16507432018
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Dudarev, Alexey
Bremer, Johan
Mentink, Matthias
Mulder, Tim
ter Harmsel, Jeroen
ten Kate, Herman H J
New bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications
title New bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications
title_full New bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications
title_fullStr New bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications
title_full_unstemmed New bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications
title_short New bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications
title_sort new bridge temperature sensor for superconducting magnets and other cryogenic applications
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2017.2782212
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2306356
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AT bremerjohan newbridgetemperaturesensorforsuperconductingmagnetsandothercryogenicapplications
AT mentinkmatthias newbridgetemperaturesensorforsuperconductingmagnetsandothercryogenicapplications
AT muldertim newbridgetemperaturesensorforsuperconductingmagnetsandothercryogenicapplications
AT terharmseljeroen newbridgetemperaturesensorforsuperconductingmagnetsandothercryogenicapplications
AT tenkatehermanhj newbridgetemperaturesensorforsuperconductingmagnetsandothercryogenicapplications