The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

Understanding magnetization losses of Roebel cables with striated REBCO strands

Understanding magnetization losses of Roebel cables with striated REBCO strands
Understanding magnetization losses of Roebel cables with striated REBCO strands
High current superconducting cables are essential for past and future accelerator and fusion magnets. The low temperature superconducting (LTS) cables for the LHC and ITER machine owe their success to the effective minimisation of the magnetisation in the LTS wires by incorporating twisted fine filaments. In contrast, the magnetisation of REBCO tapes remains significant in assembled strands of Roebel cables and twisted stacks cables. The quantitative details the magnetisation loss have not been sufficiently elaborated due the 3D nature of the strand assembling and/or twisting. Although full 3D modeling of Roebel cables has been made, the separation of loss components is less straightforward due to the complexity of their interplay. By using simplified 1D models based on conceptual reasoning, it was shown in our previous studies that (a) Roebel cables with (2m + 1) REBCO strands of critical current Ic are essentially two side-by-side stacks of m transposed strands and each stack is effectively a single Norris’ strip of ∼ m × Ic but also magnetically coupled to the other viathe strong demagnetisation effect in the narrow gap in between,and (b) full decoupling into isolate tapes is only achieved in the single strand in transposition “flights” from one stack to another.Consequently, the magnetisation of Norris’ strip can be extended straightforwardly for loss calculations in simple algebra forms to achieve satisfactory agreement with experimental results. On the other hand, the ac losses measured on Roebel cables with striated REBCO exhibited significant differences which are yet to be fully understood. Using qualitative arguments together with 1D analytical results as well as numerical modeling, this work show the“filaments” in a striated strand are also magnetically coupled hence behave considerably differently from a set of isolated filaments of Norris’ strips. It then explains that small random misalignments among the striated strands when assembled into a Roebel cable would alter significantly the magnetic coupling within the stacks and result in the ac loss behaviour observed in experiments.
AC losses, REBCO 2G conductor, Roebel cable, modeling, striation
1051-8223
Yang, Yifeng
4cac858a-e0c0-4174-a839-05ca394fc51f
Yang, Yifeng
4cac858a-e0c0-4174-a839-05ca394fc51f

Yang, Yifeng (2025) Understanding magnetization losses of Roebel cables with striated REBCO strands. IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity, 35 (5), [8200105]. (doi:10.1109/TASC.2025.3526114).

Record type: Article

Abstract

High current superconducting cables are essential for past and future accelerator and fusion magnets. The low temperature superconducting (LTS) cables for the LHC and ITER machine owe their success to the effective minimisation of the magnetisation in the LTS wires by incorporating twisted fine filaments. In contrast, the magnetisation of REBCO tapes remains significant in assembled strands of Roebel cables and twisted stacks cables. The quantitative details the magnetisation loss have not been sufficiently elaborated due the 3D nature of the strand assembling and/or twisting. Although full 3D modeling of Roebel cables has been made, the separation of loss components is less straightforward due to the complexity of their interplay. By using simplified 1D models based on conceptual reasoning, it was shown in our previous studies that (a) Roebel cables with (2m + 1) REBCO strands of critical current Ic are essentially two side-by-side stacks of m transposed strands and each stack is effectively a single Norris’ strip of ∼ m × Ic but also magnetically coupled to the other viathe strong demagnetisation effect in the narrow gap in between,and (b) full decoupling into isolate tapes is only achieved in the single strand in transposition “flights” from one stack to another.Consequently, the magnetisation of Norris’ strip can be extended straightforwardly for loss calculations in simple algebra forms to achieve satisfactory agreement with experimental results. On the other hand, the ac losses measured on Roebel cables with striated REBCO exhibited significant differences which are yet to be fully understood. Using qualitative arguments together with 1D analytical results as well as numerical modeling, this work show the“filaments” in a striated strand are also magnetically coupled hence behave considerably differently from a set of isolated filaments of Norris’ strips. It then explains that small random misalignments among the striated strands when assembled into a Roebel cable would alter significantly the magnetic coupling within the stacks and result in the ac loss behaviour observed in experiments.

Text
4LOr2D-06-Final - Accepted Manuscript
Download (3MB)
Text
TASC.2025.3526114 - Version of Record
Restricted to Repository staff only
Request a copy

More information

Accepted/In Press date: 20 December 2024
Published date: 6 January 2025
Keywords: AC losses, REBCO 2G conductor, Roebel cable, modeling, striation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 498519
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/498519
ISSN: 1051-8223
PURE UUID: 25da6393-e733-4cbf-9e13-502e7aba1a4e
ORCID for Yifeng Yang: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3874-6735

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Feb 2025 17:45
Last modified: 21 Feb 2025 02:35

Export record

Altmetrics

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×