This application is the U.S. National Stage of International Application No. PCT/EP2013/075241 filed Dec. 2, 2013, which designated the United States and has been published as International Publication No. WO 2014/095328 A1 and which claims the priority of German Patent Application, Serial No. 10 2012 223 366.0, filed Dec. 17, 2012, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 119(a)-(d).
The present invention relates to a superconducting coil device with a coil winding comprising at least two superconducting strip conductors and contacts for connecting the coil device to an external circuit.
Coil devices are known in the field of superconducting machines and superconducting magnetic coils in which superconducting wires or strip conductors are wound into coil windings. Conductors in the form of wires are usually used for classical low-temperature superconductors such as NbTi and Nb3Sn. High-temperature superconductors or also high-Tc superconductors (HTS) on the other hand are superconducting materials with a critical temperature of above 25 K and for a few classes of material of above 77 K. These HTS conductors are typically available in the form of flat strip conductors, having a strip-type substrate strip and a superconducting layer disposed on the substrate strip. In addition the strip conductors often have even further layers such as stabilization layers, contact layers, buffer layers and in some cases also insulation layers. The most important class of material of the so-called second-generation HIS conductors (2G-HTS) are compounds of the type REBa2Cu3Ox, wherein RE stands for an element of the rare earths or a mixture of such elements.
The substrate strip typically consists of either steel or the alloy Hastelloy. Electrical contact to an external circuit is mostly established via a contact layer made of copper, wherein this contact layer is either applied on one side above the super conducting layer or can surround the entire strip conductor as an enveloping layer. In both versions it is better to establish the contact on the upper side, i.e. on the side of the substrate strip which bears the superconducting strip. With contacting on the rear side, i.e. on the side of the substrate facing away from the superconducting layer, higher contact resistances occur, which leads to greater electrical losses and an increased need for cooling in these areas.
With a superconducting coil winding, in which a number of layers of a strip conductor lie in a number of turns above one another, it is often difficult to contact both ends of the coil winding on the upper side. With standard winding techniques used for manufacturing disk windings the upper side of the strip conductor will usually be facing inwards either on the inner side or on the outer side of the winding. In order, despite this, to create a low-resistance contact on the upper side of the strip conductor, with known coil devices a specially designed contact piece is used, which is pushed into the winding on the upper side of the strip conductor. However a complex manufacturing process is needed for such a coil device since, to guarantee the mechanical stability needed, particular measures must be taken at the location of this contact piece. If a wet winding process with an epoxy adhesive is used then first of all a filler piece, made of Teflon for example, must be inserted in order to keep the points to be contacted free from adhesive. After removal of the filler piece, for contacting this point for example, a solder connection to a contact piece made, of copper can be established. However since this contact lies within the winding, to establish the necessary mechanical stability of the contact area, it must be fixed retroactively with bandages made of glass fiber reinforced plastic and epoxy adhesive.
The object of the present invention is to specify a superconducting coil device which avoids the said disadvantages.
This object is achieved by the coil device described in the independent claim. The inventive coil device comprises a least one coil winding with a first and a second strip conductor, wherein each of the two strip conductors has a contact side with a contact layer. Furthermore the coil device comprises at least a first contact between the first strip conductor and a first contact piece and a second contact between the second strip conductor and a second contact piece for connecting the coil device to an external circuit. Within the coil winding the first strip conductor and the second strip conductor are connected electrically via a third contact between their contact layers.
The first and the second strip conductor differ in relation to the orientation of the contact side to a center of the coil winding. In such cases contact side refers to the upper side mentioned at the start.
The effect of creating an additional third contact within the winding is that the strip conductor is turned around within the winding. This leads, for a simple winding consisting of a plurality of flat turns lying above one another, both on the inner side of the winding and also on the outer side of the winding, to the side of the strip conductor with the lower resistance contact to the superconducting layer lying on the outside. The inner side of the winding here refers to the central area of the spiral which forms the coil winding. The creation of the third contact between the contact layer of the first strip conductor and contact layer of the second strip conductor makes it possible to establish an especially low-resistance connection between the superconducting layer of the first strip conductor and the superconducting layer of the second strip conductor via the respective associated contact layers.
Usually the creation of additional contacts within superconducting windings is avoided, since with such an additional contact point an ohmic resistance is always introduced into the winding. The structure of the inventive coil device is based on the knowledge that such an additional ohmic contact within the winding can still be advantageous if the establishing of the outer contacts is simplified thereby. The series resistance present overall can in some cases even be lower than with a conventional coil winding, since the contacts to the external circuit can be made over a larger surface and can be designed to have lower resistance if no contact pieces need to be inserted into the inside of the winding at the ends. The mechanical stability of the inventive coil is also higher, since the additional contact inside the winding can either be glued in as well during the manufacturing of the coil in a wet winding process or can be enclosed in a subsequent casting of the coil in casting compound. The gluing-in or casting-in of the additional contact point can be done in the same method step as the gluing-in or casting of the remaining windings so that, to achieve the same mechanical stability, fewer method steps are needed than with known coil devices with a contact piece at the outer end of the winding.
Advantageous embodiments and developments of the inventive coil device emerge from the dependent claims. Accordingly the coil device can additionally have the following features:
The first contact can be disposed on a side of the first strip conductor facing away from one of the turns of the first strip conductor and the second contact can be disposed on a side of the second strip conductor facing away from one of the turns of the second strip conductor.
The first contact can be formed between the first contact piece and the contact layer on the contact side of the first strip conductor and the second contact can be formed between the second contact piece and the contact layer on the contact side of the second strip conductor.
The first contact can be disposed on the inner side of the coil winding and the second contact can be disposed on the outer side of the coil winding. With this embodiment, on both sides of the winding arrangement, i.e. inside and outside easy access to the two contact points to the external circuit is possible. As above the inner side of the winding arrangement refers to the central area of the spirals.
The third contact between the first strip conductor and the second strip conductor can be embodied by a soldered connection. Advantageous solder materials for making a low-resistance contact are indium-based solders.
The contact resistance of the third contact can advantageously be less than 1 μOhm, especially advantageously less than 100 nOhm.
The third contact between the first and second strip conductor can advantageously be embodied over a length of between 1 cm and 5 cm.
The coil device can include a cooling device for cooling the windings. Such cooling is expedient to guarantee an operating temperature of the superconductor below its critical temperature. In the area of the third contact the thermal connection to the cooling device can be more strongly marked than in the other inner areas of the winding. Since there is an ohmic resistance in the area of the third contact it will cause heat to develop at this point. In order to also keep the superconducting strip conductor at its operating temperature in this area, it is advantageous to create a stronger thermal connection to the cooling device at these points than in the other inner areas of the winding. A stronger thermal connection than in the inner area of the winding is also expedient in the areas of the first and second contact at the respective ends of the winding.
The coil device can have a superconducting layer. The superconducting layer can contain a second-generation high-temperature superconductor, especially ReBa2Cu3Ox. The letters RE here stand for an element of the rare earths or a mixture of such elements.
The contact layer can contain copper. Likewise the first and the second contact piece can contain copper.
The first and the second strip conductor can each include a substrate which especially contains steel and/or the alloy Hastelloy.
The first and the second strip conductor can also include a contact layer on the side of the substrate facing away from the superconducting layer and/or be enveloped on all sides by a contact layer. Even if a contact layer is present on the side of the substrate facing away from the superconducting layer it is advantageous to contact the contact strip on the side of the superconducting layer, since the ohmic resistance is lower here than if the contact has to be realized through the substrate strip or around the edge of the strip.
The coil winding can be embodied as a disk winding, especially as a race-track coil a rectangular coil or as a circular disk winding.
The turns of the coil device can be mechanically fixed with a casting compound and/or with an adhesive. This is especially advantageous for applications in motors and generators in which high centrifugal forces occur and for applications in magnetic coils in which high Lorentz forces occur. In both cases the casting compound and/or the gluing protects the coil winding against mechanical stresses.
Protection against such mechanical stresses is expedient above all in the use of high-temperature superconductors with sensitive ceramic materials. Advantageous materials for casting-in or gluing-in the coil winding are epoxy materials.
The coil winding can comprise an even number of strip conductors, which are connected with one another via an odd number of contacts. If more than two strip conductors are connected to one another via more than one contact, if an odd number of contacts are present a turning around of the strip conductor on the length of the coil winding can still be effected, which in turn makes possible simplified contacting at the ends of the coil winding.
The coil device can also comprise a stack of a number of layers above one another, wherein each layer of the stack comprises at least two strip conductors connected to one another via at least one contact. Advantageously, within each layer of the stack, the number of the strip conductors connected to one another is even and the number of contact points is odd.
The invention is described below on the basis of two preferred exemplary embodiments, which refer to the appended drawings, in which:
Contacting of the strip conductor 1 is advantageously possible via the contact layer 8. The side of the strip conductor 1 lying at the top in
The third contact is once again realized as a soldered connection on the contact sides 13 of the respective strip conductors 41 to 44. The connection is thus made between the contact layers 8 of the strip conductors. The connection of the first 41, 42 and second 43, 44 strip conductors within each layer via the third contacts 38, 39 achieves the result that both on the inside and also on the outside of the coil winding the contact sides 13 are freely accessible for all strip conductors from both layers. Thus the first contact 17 with the first contact pieces 19 and the second contacts 19 with the second contact pieces 23 can be made in a similar way to the first exemplary embodiment without inserting contact pieces into the winding.
In the second exemplary embodiment the strip conductors each have a substrate 2, a buffer layer 4, a superconducting layer 6, a contact layer 8 and a cover layer 10, similar to the layout shown in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2012 223 366 | Dec 2012 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2013/075241 | 12/2/2013 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/095328 | 6/26/2014 | WO | A |
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20150318099 A1 | Nov 2015 | US |