1. Field of the Invention
The present invention addresses the issue of joining superconducting wires in such a manner to produce a superconducting joint. The present invention aims to provide such a method which is effective, produces mechanically robust joints quickly, and avoids or reduces the use of dangerous or harmful chemicals.
2. Description of the Prior Art
An application for superconducting wire is in producing superconducting electromagnets for generating strong magnetic field for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Several coils are required, each made up of several kilometers of wire. It is necessary to join these coils together in an electrical circuit, and it is commonly required to make joints within the length of wire used for any particular coil. The joints usually take the form of joint cups filled with a superconducting alloy in which exposed superconducting filaments are immersed. The resultant joints are mechanically attached to the structure of the magnet as required. The present invention relates to the structure of such joints.
An example of a conventional superconducting wire comprises a number of NbTi filaments within a copper matrix material. A conventional method of joining such wires proceeds as follows.
The ends of the wires are etched in nitric acid to remove the copper matrix material, and then further etched in hydrofluoric acid to remove any oxide from the surfaces of the NbTi filaments. It is also well known to those skilled in the art that it is possible to remove the copper matrix and oxide using an electrolytic process. The filaments of the wires to be joined are twisted or plaited together to provide an area of contact between the filaments. The plaited or twisted filaments are immersed in a small cup of molten superconducting alloy such as PbBiSn or Wood's metal. While this method has been successfully employed for some time, safety and regulatory concerns mean that it is desired to phase out the use of lead, as used in PbBiSn and Wood's metal, and hydrofluoric acid.
The present invention accordingly aims to provide a method for electrically joining superconducting wires to produce superconducting joints in a manner which does not require the use of lead or lead alloys, of hydrofluoric acid. Such method should be rapid and produce electrically and mechanically reliable joints.
It is believed to be impossible to use conventional welding to join superconducting NbTi filaments together into a superconducting joint, as the required rise in temperature of the filaments would alter the molecular structure of the NbTi and ruin its superconducting properties.
The NbTi filaments themselves may be found too resistive to hold significant eddy currents, and so the process will be slightly inefficient or one would have to rely on very high powers from the capacitor banks which drive the magnetic coils.
Magnetic welding is a known method of welding electrically conductive components together without heat. Similar or dissimilar materials may be welded. Essentially, the technique relies on an oscillating magnetic field generating eddy currents which interact to cause the extreme acceleration of one piece towards another. On impact, usually at closing speeds of hundreds of meters per second, any surface oxide is broken away, and airflow caused by the relative motion of the pieces blows oxide away from the contact area. The resulting high-energy impact between clean metallic surfaces results in a cold weld—or molecular bond—between the materials of the pieces.
The prior art document available at the filing date of the present invention at www.english.pstproducts.com/index_htm_files/empt%20forming%20welding%20crim ping%20and%20cutting.pdf provides a background explanation of mechanical welding and mechanical crimping. A copy of that document is filed with the priority application GB1207624.6.
A known method of forming superconducting joints by pressure welding is described in US2011/0028327, but that method does not benefit from some of the advantages of the present invention: for example, the present invention provides for removal of oxides from surfaces to be welded, which is not the case for this prior art method. The present invention also provides a method in which the opportunity for movement of the filaments is reduced as compared to that in US2011/0028327, encouraging more filaments to be welded in the method of the present invention.
Other known methods, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,082,164 and U.S. Pat. No. 5,111,574 involve the use of heat, which may be detrimental to the superconducting properties of the filaments.
The present invention accordingly provides methods of joining superconducting filaments together to form superconducting wires without the use of lead, or hydrofluoric acid, and without the application of heat.
The above object is achieved in accordance with the present invention by a method for electrically joining superconducting wires wherein matrix material is stripped from superconducting wires to expose superconducting filaments of the superconducting wires, and the filaments are placed between two electrically conductive pieces, wherein one of the electrically conductive pieces is an electrically conductive tube or cup that is open at at least one end, and the other of the electrically conductive pieces is an insert that fits into the at least one open end of the tube or cup. The electrically conductive pieces are magnetically welded to form a superconducting joint that includes the filaments that are cold welded with molecular bonds between each other, and between the filaments and the two electrically conductive pieces. The magnetic welding takes place with the tube or cup being violently compressed onto insert 14, with the filaments positioned between the insert and the tube or cup.
The invention also encompasses a superconducting joint made according to the above-described method.
The present invention employs the technique of magnetic welding for the production of superconducting joints between superconducting filaments.
Although NbTi filaments themselves are not ideally suitable as a participant in magnetic welding because the eddy current is dependent on the resistivity of the material and NbTi has a relatively high resistivity, the present invention provides a method of producing electrically and mechanically effective superconducting joints using magnetic welding.
As shown in
In preparation for jointing, the matrix material, typically copper, of the wires to be joined, is stripped from ends of the wires to be joined, leaving exposed superconducting filaments for joining.
As shown in
A similar but alternative method is shown in
Magnetic welding is believed to work best with highly-conductive pieces to be joined. For that reason, copper or aluminum pieces are preferred. However, other materials such as stainless steel may be used, and the magnetically-welded parts may be of dissimilar materials, such as a copper piece and an aluminum piece.
In its general scope, the present invention provides a method for joining superconducting wires which involves stripping matrix material from superconducting filaments, placing these filaments between electrically conductive pieces and applying magnetic welding to those pieces, so that the filaments become cold welded with molecular bonds between each other and between the filaments and the two electrically conductive pieces.
The joint produced by the methods described thus far is as shown in
Further steps may be applied as required by the application.
It may be preferred to use a tube 10 which is open at both ends to avoid entrapment of air within the joint, which might later contaminate the interior of a vacuum vessel or cryogen vessel.
In alternative arrangements, any excess wire may be radially placed on the outer surface of coils, or in a groove cut into a former between coils, while the joint of the present invention is placed in a cup or trough filled with a wax, or a grease or a resin.
While the invention has been described with reference to NbTi filaments in the superconducting wires, it may also be applied to superconducting wires having Nb3Sn filaments and MgB2 or any other low and high temperature superconducting material for those skilled in the art. These superconductors could be in the form of wires or tapes without any restriction on cross-section.
While the particularly-described embodiments involve superconducting wires with multiple superconducting filaments, it may also be applied to superconducting wires which have a single superconducting filament, or “tapes” which are flat wires.
In the above-mentioned embodiments, the insert 14 may be made of a superconducting material, such as NbTi. This will increase the superconducting cross-section of the resulting joint, as any welds between filaments and the insert will from part of the superconducting joint, rather than only the welds between filaments.
Although modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of their contribution to the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1207624.6 | May 2012 | GB | national |
1208949.6 | May 2012 | GB | national |