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Hoop Stress Tests of Bi-2223 Coils

2008 
High-temperature superconductors (HTS) are considered to be indispensable to realize NMR magnets that exceed 1 GHz owing to their high critical current densities even in high magnetic fields exceeding 20 T. Feasibility studies of the 1-GHz NMR magnet with the HTS inner coil have been reported. HTS conductors are brittle, and it is not easy to apply to superconducting coils such as the inner coils of the 1-GHz NMR magnet. Investigations into the mechanical properties of HTS coils are quite important. The hoop stress is an important factor in magnet design. Bi-2223 conductors are most promising because they are commercially available and can be obtained with lengths of more than 1,000 m. Double pancake coils with an inner diameter of 260 mm wound from Bi-2223/Ag conductors of the Sumitomo DI-BSCCO (high- type and high-strength type) were fabricated to evaluate the hoop stress dependence of the critical current of the coil. The double pancake coils were tested using the 14-T superconducting magnet with a room temperature bore of 400mm in diameter at the Tsukuba Magnet Laboratory (TML). The critical current of the high- test coil was 164 A, where the hoop stress was estimated at 323 MPa. The critical current decreased to 140 A after energizing the coil above a hoop stress of 300 MPa. The high-strength test coil burst at a hoop stress of approximately 200 MPa.
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