Title :
The Effect of Thermo-Mechanical Treatments on
and
of Nb-Ti Strands
Author :
Shikov, Alexander K. ; Pantsyrny, Victor I. ; Kozlenkova, Nina I. ; Potanina, Liudmila V. ; Vasilyev, Roman M. ; Gubkin, Igor N. ; Nikulenkov, Eugeniy V. ; Emhofer, Johann ; Eisterer, Michael ; Weber, Harald W.
Author_Institution :
Bochvar Inst. (VNIINM), Moscow, Russia
fDate :
6/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
An extended database of critical current densities J c(T,B) and current sharing temperatures Tcs for Nb-Ti strands was obtained in this work. This data set allows one to make a more realistic forecast of the ITER poloidal field (PF) coil critical current at temperatures above 6 K and in a magnetic field of 6 T. It is found that Jc (4.2 K, 5 T) lies in the range from 700 to 2950 A/mm2, depending on the heat treatment regimes, and that Jc(6.5 K, 6 T) is 28 to 54 A/mm2 almost regardless of the applied heat treatment, i.e. the microstructure does not significantly affect Jc(6.5 K, 6 T) under such ldquoextremerdquo conditions. It is shown, that T cs (6 T) at a current of 31.2 A, which is close to the assumed operating current for the strand in the ITER PF1&6 coils, is 6.1-6.25 K. It is shown furthermore, that the application of multiparametric functions for the description of J c(T, B) or V(I, T, B) leads to a reliable prediction of Jc(T, B) only in a temperature and field range, where experimental data points are available (extrapolations result in large deviations).
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; critical current density (superconductivity); crystal microstructure; magnetic field effects; niobium alloys; superconducting magnets; superconducting materials; thermomechanical treatment; titanium alloys; ITER magnet; NbTi; critical current densities; current 31.2 A; current sharing temperatures; heat treatment; magnetic field; magnetic flux density 5 T; magnetic flux density 6 T; microstructure; multiparametric functions; operating current; temperature 4.2 K to 6.5 K; thermo-mechanical treatments; Critical current density; NbTi strand; magnetic field; temperature;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2009.2019134