Title :
Scaling of Superconducting Switches for Extraction of Magnetic Energy
Author :
Ballarino, Amalia ; Taylor, Thomas
Author_Institution :
CERN, Eur. Organ. for Nucl. Res., Geneva, Switzerland
fDate :
6/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In certain cases it is necessary to extract the energy from a superconducting magnet when it quenches, in order to limit the heat generated by the event and thus prevent irreversible damage. This is usually achieved by opening a contact breaker across a resistor in the circuit feeding the magnet. For the heavy currents used to excite large magnets such switches incorporate sophisticated devices to limit arcing during the operation; the devices are reliable but are also bulky and expensive. It is interesting to consider the use of superconducting switches to perform this function, an important advantage being that they would be housed in the cryogenic environment of the magnet, and thus avoid permanent diversion of the current in and out of that environment to the mechanical switch (which operates at room temperature). However, practical switches for such an application are made up of superconductor in a metal matrix, and it is convenient to work with a relatively low resistance to approximate to the open circuit. This leads to scaling laws for superconducting switches for this application which relate the operating current and stored energy of the magnet system, the type of superconductor, and the necessary size of the device.
Keywords :
circuit breakers; superconducting magnet energy storage; superconducting magnets; superconducting switches; circuit feeding; contact breaker; heat generation; magnet system energy storage; magnetic energy extraction; mechanical switch; resistor; superconducting switches; Energy extraction; magnet protection; superconducting switch;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2010.2042044