AC loss and contact resistance in REBCO CORC®, Roebel, and stacked tape cables

Abstract

Many high-temperature superconductor (HTS) applications require superconducting cables with high currents while operating in an alternating magnetic field. HTS cables should be composed of numerous superconducting tapes to achieve the required current capacity. Alternating current and magnetic fields cause AC losses in such cables and can provoke conductor instability. AC losses and contact resistances were measured of several cable designs based on commercially available REBCO tapes at the University of Twente. The AC loss was measured under identical conditions for eight REBCO conductors manufactured according to three types of cabling methods—CORC® (Conductor on Round Core), Roebel, and stacked tape, including a full-size REBCO CICC (cable in conduit conductor). The measurements were done at T = 4.2 K without transport current in a sinusoidal AC magnetic field of 0.4 T amplitude and frequencies from 5 to 55 mHz. The AC loss was measured simultaneously by calibrated gas flow calorimeter utilizing the helium boil-off method and by the magnetization method using pick-up coils. Also, the AC loss of two CORC® conductors and a Roebel cable was measured at 77 K. Each conductor was measured with and without background field of 1 T. The measured AC coupling loss in the CORC® and Roebel conductors is negligible at 4.2 K for the applied conditions while at 77 K coupling loss was observed for all conductors. The absence of coupling loss at 4.2 K can be explained by shielding of the conductor interior; this is confirmed with measurement and calculation of the penetration field of CORC® and Roebel cables. The inter-tape contact resistance was measured for CORC® and stacked tape samples at 4.2 and 77 K. It was demonstrated that a short heat treatment of CORC® conductor with solder-coated tapes activates tape-to-tape soldering and decreases the contact resistance. The reduction of contact resistance by two orders in magnitude to tens of nΩm is comparable with the interstrand contact resistance in ITER Nb3Sn type conductors.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Jul 02, 2020
Source ID
10.1088/1361-6668/ab97ff

Entities

People

  • Arend Nijhuis
  • D C van der Laan
  • Jeremy Weiss
  • K Yagotintsev
  • M J Dhalle
  • M.S.A. Hossain
  • Peng Gao
  • Timothy J. Haugan
  • V A Anvar

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Air Force Research Laboratory
  • United States Department of Energy
  • University of Twente

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Electrical Engineering
  • Superconducting Magnet Technology