WOUND HTS MAGNET COILS
20220215994 · 2022-07-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01F6/06
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A method of manufacturing an HTS coil is provided. The method comprises winding an ITS coil cable to produce a coil having a plurality of turns. During winding of a turn of the coil, one or more HTS shunt cables are placed adjacent to the previous turn of the coil along a first arc of the coil, and then the turn is wound such that the HTS shunt cable is sandwiched between the turn and the previous turn of the coil such that current can be shared between the HTS shunt cable and the HTS coil cable.
Claims
1. A high temperature superconductor, FITS, coil comprising: an HTS coil cable arranged to form a spiral having a plurality of turns, wherein the HTS coil cable includes at least one HTS shunt cable arranged between HTS tapes of the HTS coil cable along an arc of the HTS coil cable such that current can be shared between the HTS shunt cable and the HTS coil cable, wherein the HTS shunt cable includes HTS tapes which are arranged parallel to the HTS tapes of the HTS coil cable.
2. The HTS coil according to claim 1, wherein the HTS coil is configured to be a toroidal field coil and the first arc contains a central column of the toroidal field coil.
3. The HTS coil according to claim 1, wherein the HTS coil cable includes a plurality of HTS shunt cables, and where each ITS shunt cable lies along the arc of the HTS coil cable.
4. The HTS coil according to claim 3, wherein each turn of the HTS coil includes an HTS shunt cable of the plurality of HTS shunt cables.
5. The HTS coil according to claim 1, wherein each HTS shunt cable includes HTS tapes having a substrate and an HTS layer, and wherein the HTS shunt cable is interleaved such that an HTS layer of an HTS tape of the HTS shunt cable faces an HTS layer of an HTS tape of the HTS coil cable.
6. The HTS coil according to claim 1, wherein each HTS shunt cable includes HTS tapes, and each HTS tape ends at a different point along the HTS coil cable.
7. A method of manufacturing a high temperature superconducting, HTS, coil, the method comprising: interleaving one or more HTS shunt cables between HTS tapes of an HTS coil cable, such that, when the or each HTS coil cable is wound to produce a coil, the or each HTS shunt cable lies along a first arc of the coil; wherein the one or more HTS shunt cables includes HTS tapes, and the HTS tapes of the HTS shunt cables are arranged parallel to the HTS tapes of the HTS coil cable; and the method further including: winding the HTS coil cable to produce a coil having a plurality of turns.
8. The method according to claim 7, and including repeating the step of interleaving an HTS shunt cable between HTS tapes of the HTS coil cable for each of a plurality of shunts, such that when the HTS coil cable is wound around the former, each HTS shunt cable lies along the first arc.
9. The method according to claim 8, and including interleaving HTS shunt cables such that when the HTS coil cable is wound around the former, there is an HTS shunt cable in each turn of the coil.
10. The method according to claim 7, wherein each HTS shunt cable includes HTS tapes having a substrate and an HTS layer, and wherein the HTS shunt cable is interleaved such that an HTS layer of an HTS tape of the HTS shunt cable faces an HTS layer of an HTS tape of the HTS coil cable.
11. The method according to claim 7, wherein each HTS shunt cable includes HTS tapes, and each HTS tape ends at a different point along the ITS coil cable.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0047] A coil construction will now be described which allows the use of grading (i.e. variable amounts of HTS in different parts of the coil) for a wound coil, particularly a pancake coil. Such a construction is of particular use for coils which would have a significantly asymmetric magnetic field when in use, be subject to a significantly asymmetric external field and/or be subject to a significant temperature gradient. For example, such a construction is particularly useful in the toroidal field (TF) coil of a tokamak, where the parts of the toroidal field coil which pass through the central column experience considerably higher magnetic field than the return limbs, and hence require considerably more HTS to carry the same transport current than the parts in the outer sections of the return limbs. The angle between the magnetic field and the ab-plane of the ReBCO must also be considered when choosing the number of HTS tapes required to carry the transport current, so the TF magnet design is complex.
[0048] Grading is desirable for two reasons: (a) to minimise the amount of (expensive) HTS needed, and (b) to keep all parts of the coil at a similar fraction of critical current. The second reason is important because it ensures that the temperature margin of the coil is similar at all positions, facilitating a more uniform quench when the magnet has to be rapidly shut down by heating the coils.
[0049] The manufacture of such a coil is similar to that of a conventional wound HTS coil.
[0050] Additional components, such as sensors, coolant channels, or heaters for inducing quenches may be wound into the coil in other arcs, in a similar manner to the shunts, except that such additional components may or may not require electrical contact to the main HTS coil.
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[0052] The HTS shunts may be made from a cable with the same structure (i.e. number and arrangement of tapes) as that of the main HTS coil, or they may be made from a cable with a different structure. HTS shunts between different turns may have different structures or be made from HTS manufactured by different methods, with varying performance and dimensions.
[0053] There will be some resistance between the main HTS coil and the HTS shunts, but this will be very low as current can transfer to or from the shunts along their whole length. This is also true if the coil is provided without insulation, such that current can enter the shunts from either side—though the resistance on the substrate side of the HTS shunt would be higher than that on the HTS side. As such, when the current in the coil is such that if the critical current of the main HTS coil alone is not sufficient in the arc with the shunts to carry the transport current, then excess current will be easily shared to the HTS shunts. At currents less than the critical current of the main HTS coil in the graded region, the vast majority of the current will primarily flow in the wound HTS coil. As the wound coil current approaches the critical current of the parts of the coil experiencing higher magnetic field (or higher temperature, or magnetic field angle less well aligned with the c-axis of the ReBCO HTS layer), the HTS will generate a voltage which will drive excess current through the small resistance between the main coil and the shunt. The voltage generated per metre of HTS (E.sub.HTS) is given by
where E.sub.0=1.mu.V/cm is the defined critical current criterion, I.sub.c is the critical current of the tape at this criterion, and n is an experimental parameter that models the sharpness of the superconducting to normal transition; n is typically in the range 20-50 for ReBCO. Depending on the value of n, the voltage is negligible for values of .alpha.=I/I.sub.c less than about 0.8. The excess current above the local critical current will be shared into the shunt. This will happen with minimal dissipation, and the small amount of heat generated will be accommodated by the design of the coil cooling system. The number of shunts, and the number of tapes in each shunt, can be chosen based on the amount of HTS needed to keep the ratio .alpha. approximately the same in all parts of the coil. The cable used for the main HTS coil and the cable used for the HTS shunts may have the same structure (e.g. number and arrangement of tapes), or may have different structures.
[0054] Where shunts are provided along an arc of the coil, they may be provided evenly to all tapes of the coil tape (e.g. each turn of the coil tape may have an HTS shunt comprising two tapes), or the distribution of the shunts may vary across the coil cross section (e.g. providing shunts to every turn towards the outside of the central column for a TF coil, and providing shunts only to every other turn and/or shunts with fewer HTS tapes for turns towards the inside of the central column of a TF coil, as the magnetic field is lower).
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[0056] This may be achieved by forming the cable during the same process as winding the cable around the former, e.g. by providing one or more spools of HTS tape, which are brought together to form a cable, which is then wound around the former in a continuous process. The HTS shunts and substituted metal layers may then be added between the HTS tapes as a part of this process.
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[0058] Additionally,
[0059] The core of a spherical tokamak requires high current density in the TF coils, to minimise the space taken by windings and maximise the space available for neutron shielding. This is less important in the return limbs, where conductors can be spread out to reduce the field seen by any conductor from its near neighbours. As illustrated schematically in
[0060] Current transfer is easiest (i.e. the resistance is lower) where an HTS layer of the main coil cable faces an HTS layer of a shunt (i.e. the outer cables of the coil cable and shunt cable form a type-0 pair). As such, the HTS cables of the main coil cable and each shunt may be formed such that the outer HTS tapes of the cable have HTS layers facing outward from the cable.
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[0062] The coil may be wound as a double pancake coil—i.e. with two coils wound in opposite sense and connected at their inner terminals. The connection can be a resistive joint, but it is possible to avoid a joint completely by winding the pair from a single length of cable, as known in prior art. The arrangement of HTS shunts in the two coils may be the same (as they are exposed to substantially the same conditions), but the heaters, sensors, and other components inserted into the coil may vary.