DocumentCode
1109928
Title
Design of an opposing pair magnet system for ASTROMAG
Author
Marston, P.G. ; Hale, J.R. ; Vieira, R.F. ; Zhukovsky, A. ; Titus, P. ; Sullivan, J. ; Dawson, A.
Author_Institution
Plasma Fusion Center, MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA
Volume
27
Issue
2
fYear
1991
fDate
3/1/1991 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
2264
Lastpage
2268
Abstract
A magnet system comprising a pair of self-supporting disk-shaped coils has been designed for the ASTROMAG facility on the space station Freedom. The coils are connected in a quadrupole configuration in order to eliminate their dipole moment. One of the primary requirements of this design is that the magnet coils must have near-perfect structural integrity. To this end, each coil would be manufactured as a monolithic composite in which the superconducting wire is incorporated as one of the components. By utilizing a precision X-Y numerically controlled wiring machine, the coil can be built up in pancake layers by alternating prepreg sheets of fiber/epoxy (e.g. carbon or Kevlar fiber) with a layer of NbTi wire that spirals from OD to ID in one layer, from ID to OD in the next. and so on. Each disk magnet will have an ID of 0.4 m and an OD of 1.7 m. The peak field at the winding will be 7.2 T. The system is to operate at 1.8 K. and I op/I c=0.5. Results of magnetic field and force calculations are presented, and the structural characteristics of the system are described
Keywords
coils; cosmic ray apparatus; superconducting magnets; 1.8 K; 7.2 T; ASTROMAG facility; Freedom; NbTi wire; X-Y numerically controlled wiring machine; disk-shaped coils; fiber/epoxy; force calculations; magnetic field; opposing pair magnet system; pancake layers; prepreg sheets; quadrupole configuration; space station; superconducting wire; Magnetic moments; Manufacturing; Niobium compounds; Space stations; Spirals; Superconducting coils; Superconducting filaments and wires; Superconducting magnets; Titanium compounds; Wiring;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9464
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/20.133668
Filename
133668
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