학술논문

Evaluation of conductor stresses in a pulsed high-current toroidal transformer
Document Type
Conference
Source
2009 IEEE Pulsed Power Conference Pulsed Power Conference, 2009. PPC '09. IEEE. :372-377 Jun, 2009
Subject
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Photonics and Electrooptics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Nuclear Engineering
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Computing and Processing
Conductors
Stress
Pulse transformers
Magnetic circuits
Computational modeling
Laboratories
Robustness
Toroidal magnetic fields
Design methodology
Magnetic analysis
Language
ISSN
2158-4915
2158-4923
Abstract
The Precision, High-Energy Density, Liner Implosion eXperiment (PHELIX) pulsed power driver is currently under development at Los Alamos National Laboratory. When operational PHELIX will provide 5-10 MAmps of peak current with pulse rise-time of ∼5-10 ms. Crucial to the performance of PHELIX is a multi-turn primary, single-turn secondary, current step-up toroidal transformer, R major ∼ 30 cm, R minor ∼ 10 cm. The transformer lifetime should exceed 100 shots. Therefore it is essential that the design be robust enough to survive the magnetic stresses produced by high currents. In order to evaluate our design, two methods have been utilized. First, an analytical evaluation has been performed. By identifying the magnetic forces as J 1 2 /2 ∇L 1 + J 1 J 2 ∇M 12 , where J 1 and J 2 are currents in two circuits, coupled by mutual inductance M 12 and L 1 is the self-inductance of the circuit carrying current J 1 , analytical estimates of stress can be obtained. These results are then compared to a computational MHD model of the same system and to a full finite-element, electromagnetic simulation.