학술논문

Electromagnetic Simulation of No-Insulation Coils Using H – $\phi$ Thin Shell Approximation
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond. Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on. 33(5):1-6 Aug, 2023
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Coils
Magnetic fields
High-temperature superconductors
Superconducting magnets
Magnetic domains
Geometry
Finite element analysis
No-insulation coil
++%24%5Cvec{H}-%5Cphi%24<%2Ftex-math>+<%2Finline-formula>+<%2Fnamed-content>+formulation%22"> $\vec{H}-\phi$ formulation
thin shell approximation
finite element method
powering cycle
thick cuts
Language
ISSN
1051-8223
1558-2515
2378-7074
Abstract
When simulating no-insulation high-temperature superconducting pancake coils with the finite element (FE) method, the high aspect ratio of the thin turn-to-turn contact layer (T2TCL) leads to unfavorable meshes in these thin layers as manifested by a high number of degrees of freedom (DoF) or mesh elements of poor quality which decrease the accuracy of the simulation results. To mitigate this issue, we propose to collapse the T2TCL volume into a surface using a thin shell approximation (TSA) for three-dimensional FE analysis. A $\vec{H}-\phi$ formulation is used and solves for the magnetic field strength $\vec{H}$ in conducting domains and the magnetic scalar potential $\phi$ in insulating domains. This formulation avoids spurious currents and reduces the number of DoF in insulating domains. Automatically created thick cuts are used to deal with multiply connected domains. Particular attention is paid to the interpretation of these cuts and the corresponding basis functions in the context of pancake coil geometries. The efficiency of the formulation facilitates the resolution of each turn. In this way, local phenomena such as quench can be captured in a straightforward way. The TSA formulation is verified by comparison against a reference model with volumetrically meshed T2TCL and is shown to be accurate and efficient, significantly reducing the solution time while reducing the effort for creating high-quality meshes. The TSA is implemented in an open-source FE framework and the source code is shared alongside this paper.