The present invention relates to a superconducting composite wire or strip, comprising superconducting magnesium diboride material.
The use of superconducting materials in various industrial applications requires many precautions and protective measures. One of the most significant problems concerns the appropriate protection of a winding made with superconducting wire, in the eventuality in which the superconductivity phenomenon is interrupted for any reason, even if only momentarily.
Such an eventuality may arise, for example, if the coolant which keeps the superconducting wire constantly below its critical superconductive transition temperature is lost, even it this loss affects only a small portion of the winding. This is because superconducting materials generally have significant electrical resistance when heated to above the critical temperature: this temperature generally varies from a few Kelvin to approximately 150° K, depending on the material.
If this happens, it is essential to have an immediately available alternative electrical path, as nearly as possible parallel to the superconducting path, for the purpose of protecting the superconducting path from the passage of the electric current, which would otherwise seriously damage it.
This aim is usually achieved by connecting a closely specified portion of metallic material with low electrical resistance, such as copper, in parallel with the superconducting wire. In practice, this result can be obtained by jointly winding two wires, namely a superconducting wire and a metal wire, when the winding is formed.
However, this method can cause difficulties and complications in the winding process for any device. A greatly preferable solution is that of incorporating a low-resistance metallic material into the superconducting wire itself. However, in order to make this possible, there must be complete chemical and mechanical compatibility between the metallic material chosen as the stabilizer, the superconducting compound itself and the rest of the material making up the wire.
It is extremely difficult to find a solution to these problems in the case of superconducting wires made from magnesium diboride MgB2. This is because magnesium diboride shows considerable chemical incompatibility with virtually all the more conductive metallic elements which might be used as stabilizers, such as copper, silver or aluminium. These elements tend to decompose the MgB2 because of their considerable affinity for magnesium.
In order to resolve the aforementioned problems, the present invention provides a novel superconducting composite wire structure having the characteristics defined in the following claims.
According to the invention, a core of highly conductive metallic material (for example copper or silver) is incorporated in the central part of a superconducting wire comprising a plurality of magnesium diboride filaments arranged in a ring around the core.
Around the conductive core and/or around the superconducting filaments there is provided a coating which acts as a barrier to chemical diffusion, being capable of isolating chemically, but not electrically, the conductive metallic material of the core of the superconductive part.
The resulting composite is inserted into a further metallic sheath for containment and mechanical reinforcement, this sheath having the function of keeping the wire compact and providing good mechanical properties.
Thus the composite wire is internally stabilized, and can be used for producing windings and magnets without the need to wind it together with other conductive material.
Further advantages and characteristics of the invention will be made clear by the following detailed description, which refers to the attached drawings provided by way of example and without restrictive intent, in which:
In
The central core 1 is provided with an outer coating 2 of metallic material chemically compatible with magnesium diboride, to act as a barrier or impediment to the diffusion of the conductive metal towards the said superconducting phase. This barrier can be made, for example, from niobium, tantalum, iron, nickel, tungsten, molybdenum, chromium or alloys of these, and can have a sufficient minimum thickness to impede or slow down the diffusion of the internal metallic material.
This barrier can be introduced as a thin tube or rolled sheet fitted around the high-conductivity core. Alternatively, the material forming the barrier can be deposited electrochemically or by evaporation around the high-conductivity core.
A plurality of magnesium diboride filaments 3 are positioned to surround the barrier coating 2. These filaments preferably consist of single-filament wires, each comprising a superconducting core 5 of magnesium diboride and an outer metallic sheath 6, chemically compatible with magnesium diboride.
As shown in greater detail in the examples of
The materials used for the sheath can be, for example, niobium, tantalum, iron, nickel, tungsten, molybdenum, chromium, or alloys of these.
The single-filament wire is preferably made by the powder-in-tube method, by the mechanical deformation of a metallic tube which has been filled with powder consisting of MgB2 or a mixture of its constituents (essentially boron and magnesium powders).
An external sheath 4 surrounds the single-filament wires 3. The material of the external sheath can be any material having the function of containing the wire and forming the mechanical support of the wire. The materials forming the sheath can preferably be chosen from niobium, tantalum, iron, nickel, tungsten, molybdenum, chromium, or alloys of these.
The composite assembled in this way is machined by mechanical deformation in order to produce a long conductor having a circular (
The quantity of wire produced will depend exclusively on the size of the initial assembly and the final size of the conductor which is to be manufactured.
Typical dimensions for a superconducting wire with internal stabilization range from diameters of 0.2 mm to 2 mm. Similarly, it is possible to produce superconducting strips having thicknesses from 0.2 mm to 2 mm and widths from 1 mm to 5 mm.
By contrast with the prior art, this type of structure of the magnesium diboride superconducting wire enables the conductor to be heat-treated at high temperatures (above 700° C.) without contamination of the superconducting phase due to the presence of the metallic element.
In a specific embodiment, shown in
In these figures, elements corresponding to those of
In particular, the invention allows for the possibility that the diffusion barrier 2 is not necessarily placed around the central conductive core 1, but can also—or alternatively—be placed around each filament 3, either as a coating of the containing sheath 6, or in direct contact with the superconducting core 5 of the magnesium diboride filaments.
Thus all possible combinations, in twos, of the solutions shown in
In the example of
In the example of
The preceding description is applicable to the materials forming the barrier coating 2a and 2b, to the materials forming the outer metallic sheath 6 and to their application.
In the solutions of
The scope of the invention also includes the case in which, in the superconducting wire, some of the filaments 3 are made in accordance with the solution of
In all cases, the composite materials thus produced have undergone heat treatments at up to 980° C. without decomposition of the magnesium diboride due to the presence of copper.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IT2004/000437 | 7/30/2004 | WO | 00 | 5/27/2009 |