An initial magnet experiment using high-temperature superconducting STAR® wires

Author:

Wang XiaorongORCID,Bogdanof Timothy JORCID,Ferracin PaoloORCID,Ghiorso William BORCID,Gourlay Stephen AORCID,Higley Hugh CORCID,Kadiyala Janakiram KaushalORCID,Kar SoumenORCID,Lee ReginaldORCID,Luo LinqingORCID,Maruszewski Maxwell A,Memmo RobertORCID,Myers Cory SORCID,Prestemon Soren OORCID,Sandra Jithin SaiORCID,Selvamanickam VenkatORCID,Teyber ReedORCID,Turqueti MarcosORCID,Wu YuxinORCID

Abstract

Abstract A dipole magnet generating 20 T and beyond will require high-temperature superconductors such as Bi2Sr2CaCu2O 8 x and REBa2Cu3O 7 x (RE = rare earth, rebco). Symmetric tape round (star®) wires based on rebco tapes are emerging as a potential conductor for such a magnet, demonstrating a whole-conductor current density of 580 A mm−2 at 20 T, 4.2 K, and at a bend radius of 15 mm. There are, however, few magnet developments using star® wires. Here we report a subscale canted cos θ dipole magnet as an initial experiment for two purposes: to evaluate the conductor performance in a magnet configuration and to start developing the magnet technology, leveraging the small bend radius afforded by star® wires. The magnet was wound with two star® wires, electrically in parallel and without transposition. We tested the magnet at 77 and 4.2 K. The magnet reached a peak current of 8.9 kA, 78% of the short-sample prediction at 4.2 K, and a whole-conductor current density of 1500 A mm−2. The experiment demonstrated a minimum viable concept for dipole magnet applications using star® wires. The results also allowed us to identify further development needs for star® conductors and associated magnet technology to enable high-field rebco magnets.

Funder

High Energy Physics

Fusion Energy Sciences

SBIR, DOE Office of High Energy Physics

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Materials Chemistry,Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Metals and Alloys,Condensed Matter Physics,Ceramics and Composites

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