학술논문

Conceptual Design of an HTS Canted Cosine Theta Dipole Magnet for Research and Hadron Therapy Accelerators
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond. Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on. 34(5):1-5 Aug, 2024
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Superconducting magnets
High-temperature superconductors
Copper
Superconductivity
Conductors
Superconducting cables
Coils
HTS magnets
magnets for medical systems
superconducting magnets
Language
ISSN
1051-8223
1558-2515
2378-7074
Abstract
The European project IFAST's WP8 Innovative Superconducting Magnets aims to develop the technology of Canted Cosine Theta (CCT) magnets wound with High-Temperature Superconductors (HTS). Superconducting magnets could lower the size and cost of synchrotrons and gantries for research and hadron therapy. HTS materials can lead to higher magnetic fields with smaller cryogenic systems than LTS. However, they pose challenges in cable production schemes, magnet design, and cost. The project's final goal is to design a straight CCT-layout magnet with a central dipole field of 4 T, and a ramp rate of 0.4 T/s, but a lower ramp rate of 0.15–0.2 T/s is acceptable for the first step. The paper presents a preliminary design, discussing in particular the protection scheme with the magnet protection solutions for the conductor: one with two and the other with four HTS tapes. Both options generate 4 T of dipole field without an Iron shell, with at least 10 K of margin at an operational temperature of 20 K. To meet the time and budget constraints of the project, a simple cable based on a co-winding of commercial REBCO tapes is proposed. Protection is the most challenging aspect of the design and an adiabatic quench analysis has been used to determine the required thickness of copper stabilizer tapes to mitigate the risk of damaging the magnet during a quench. Finally, the paper evaluates ac and radial current losses during the magnet cycles, discussing the heat distribution and possible solutions for heat extraction.