Coupled Transient Finite Element Simulation of Quench in Jefferson Lab's 11 GeV Super High Momentum Spectrometer Superconducting Magnets

IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity(2010)

Cited 4|Views14
No score
Abstract
This paper presents coupled transient thermal and electromagnetic finite element analysis of quench in the Q2, Q3, and dipole superconducting magnets using Vector Fields Quench code. Detailed temperature distribution within coils and aluminum force collars were computed at each time step. Both normal (quench with dump resistor) and worst-case (quench without dump resistor) scenarios were simulated to investigate the maximum temperatures. Two simulation methods were utilized, and their algorithms, implementation, advantages, and disadvantages are discussed. The first method simulated the coil using nonlinear transient thermal analysis directly linked with the transient circuit analysis. It was faster because only the coil was meshed and no eddy current was modeled. The second method simulated the whole magnet including the coil, the force collar, and the iron yoke. It coupled thermal analysis with transient electromagnetic field analysis which modeled electromagnetic fields including eddy currents within the force collar. Since eddy currents and temperature in the force collars were calculated in various configurations, segmentation of the force collars was optimized under the condition of fast discharge.
More
Translated text
Key words
accelerator magnets,electron accelerators,finite element analysis,linear accelerators,superconducting coils,superconducting magnets,superconducting transitions,Jefferson Lab,Q2 superconducting magnet,Q3 superconducting magnet,Vector Fields Quench code,aluminum force collar temperature distribution,coil temperature distribution,coupled transient finite element simulation,dipole superconducting magnet,dump resistor,iron yoke,magnet quench,nonlinear transient thermal analysis,superhigh momentum spectrometer superconducting magnets,transient electromagnetic finite element analysis,transient thermal finite element analysis,Dipole,quadrupole,quench,superconducting magnet,transient finite element analysis
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined