Development of Persistent-Current Mode HTS Coil for the RT-1 Plasma Device

2006 
The plasma confinement device "RT-1" which had a high temperature superconducting (HTS) floating magnet was constructed for advanced high-beta plasma and fusion research at the University of Tokyo. The high temperature superconducting (HTS) floating magnet is magnetically levitated inside the plasma vacuum vessel. Plasma is confined by a magnetic dipole field around the HTS floating magnet. The HTS floating magnet is operated in persistent-current mode and it consists of an HTS coil, an HTS persistent-current switch (PCS), a pair of demountable joints of current leads, detachable joints of a cooling tube, a thermal shield and a vacuum vessel. The HTS coil and the PCS and the thermal shield are cooled below 20 K by a flow of helium gas through the cooling tube. The floating HTS magnet is designed to operate in the temperature range from 20 K to 30 K without being cooled while it is levitated. We fabricated a persistent-current HTS coil that consists of the HTS coil and the PCS. Persistent-current operations and protection tests were conducted with the persistent-current HTS coil before it was mounted in the floating magnet cryostat. The current-decay rate was 0.9% in an 8 hour operation. The coil energy was safely discharged by inducing PCS quench in a protection test
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