DocumentCode
1539662
Title
Shape memory effect of cable-in-conduit conductors
Author
Specking, W. ; Nyilas, A.
Author_Institution
Inst. of Tech. Phys., Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe GmbH, Germany
Volume
9
Issue
2
fYear
1999
fDate
6/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
169
Lastpage
172
Abstract
In fusion magnets, cable-in-conduit conductors (CICCs) are foreseen, consisting of an outer conduit and an inner niobium-tin cable produced by a simultaneous heat treatment. The heat treatment and the different thermal contractions of the various conductor materials lead to prestress onto the niobium-tin filaments during cool down, degrading the superconducting parameters considerably. These parameters show, during external mechanical loading, a maximum dependence on strain (E). For example, the critical current (I/sub c/) of steel jacketed CICCs increases by about a factor of 2 at /spl epsi//spl ap/0.7% and decreases again at further straining (B=13 T, T=4 K). This characteristic is reversible up to /spl epsi//spl ap/1.2% in stressed and unstressed condition of the conductor. If the conductor is plastically deformed at 4 K up to a remaining strain (/spl epsi//sub r/) and then warmed up to 295 K, /spl epsi//sub r/, decreases by about a factor of 5, which is coupled to a phase transition resulting in a change of volume in the microstructure of the steel conduit. This reduced /spl epsi//sub r/ remains constant after cooling to 4 K again (shape memory) and the critical current corresponds to this decreased /spl epsi//sub r/. In case of an accidental over-straining of a CICC, a further temperature cycle of 4 K/spl rarr/295 K/spl rarr/4 K would recover I/sub c/. Recovery strain results with different jacket materials (aged) of Type 316L, 316LN, Incoloy 908, and titanium are investigated.
Keywords
cable sheathing; critical current density (superconductivity); heat treatment; niobium alloys; shape memory effects; stainless steel; superconducting cables; tin alloys; Incoloy 908 jacket material; Nb/sub 3/Sn; Type 316L jacket material; Type 316LN jacket material; aged jacket materials; cable-in-conduit conductors; conductor materials; cool down; critical current; external mechanical loading; inner niobium-tin cable; niobium-tin filaments; outer conduit; phase transition; prestress; shape memory effect; simultaneous heat treatment; stainless steel jacket materials; steel conduit microstructure; steel jacketed CICC; superconducting parameters degradation; thermal contractions; titanium jacket material; Capacitive sensors; Conducting materials; Conductors; Critical current; Heat treatment; Niobium-tin; Shape; Steel; Superconducting cables; Superconducting materials;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1051-8223
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/77.783263
Filename
783263
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