作者
Charlie Sanabria,A. Radovinsky,Christopher L Craighill,Kiran Uppalapati,A. J. Warner,Julio Colque,E. R. Allen,Sera Evcimen,Sam Heller,David Chavarria,K. Metcalfe,Saehan Lenzen,A. Hubbard,Amy Watterson,Sarah Chamberlain,R. R. Diaz-Pacheco,Benjamin S. Weinreb,Elizabeth Brownell,Justin Nealey,Annie Hughes,Eric Laamanen,Keshav Vasudeva,Daniel A. Nash,C.G. McCormack,Erica Salazar,Owen Duke,Matt Hicks,Jeremy Adams,Dylan Kolb-Bond,T.S. Liu,Kara Malhotra,David P. Meichle,Ashleigh Francis,JL Cheng,M. L. Shepard,A. S. Greenberg,Vinny Fry,Nick Kostifakis,Carl Avola,Paul Ljubicic,L.S. Palmer,Gayatri Sundar Rajan,Ronak Padukone,Sergey Kuznetsov,Kai Donez,T. Golfinopoulos,Philip C. Michael,R. Vieira,N. Martovetsky,Rodney A. Badcock,Mike Davies,Arvid Hunze,B. M. Ludbrook,R. Gupta,P. Joshi,Shresht Joshi,Anis Ben Yahia,H. Bajas,Markus Jenni,C. MUELLER,Manuel Holenstein,Kamil Sedlák,Brandon Sorbom,D. Brunner
摘要
Abstract A low-AC loss Rare-earth barium copper oxide (REBCO) cable, based on the VIPER cable technology has been developed by commonwealth fusion systems for use in high-field, compact tokamaks. The new cable is composed of partitioned and transposed copper ‘petals’ shaped to fit together in a circular pattern with each petal containing a REBCO tape stack and insulated from each other to reduce AC losses. A stainless-steel jacket adds mechanical robustness—also serving as a vessel for solder impregnation—while a tube runs through the middle for cooling purposes. Additionally, fiber optic sensors are placed under the tape stacks for quench detection (QD). To qualify this design, a series of experiments were conducted as part of the SPARC tokamak central solenoid (CS) model coil program—to retire the risks associated with full-scale, fast-ramping, high-flux high temperature superconductors CS and poloidal field coils for tokamak fusion power plants and net-energy demonstrators. These risk-study and risk-reduction experiments include (1) AC loss measurement and model validation in the range of ∼5 T s −1 , (2) an IxB electromagnetic (EM) loading of over 850 kN m −1 at the cable level and up to 300 kN m −1 at the stack level, (3) a transverse compression resilience of over 350 MPa, (4) manufacturability at tokamak-relevant speeds and scales, (5) cable-to-cable joint performance, (6) fiber optic-based QD speed, accuracy, and feasibility, and (7) overall winding pack integration and magnet assembly. The result is a cable technology, now referred to as PIT VIPER, with AC losses that measure fifteen times lower (at ∼5 T s −1 ) than its predecessor technology; a 2% or lower degradation of critical current ( I c ) at high IxB EM loads; no detectable I c degradation up to 600 MPa of transverse compression on the cable unit cell; end-to-end magnet manufacturing, consistently producing I c values within 7% of the model prediction; cable-to-cable joint resistances at 20 K on the order of ∼15 nΩ ; and fast, functional QD capabilities that do not involve voltage taps.