Inductance and magnetization measurements on main dipoles in SM18 Emmanuele Ravaioli Thanks to A. Verweij, S. Le Naour TE-MPE-TM 02-02-2011.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Introduction to RF for Accelerators
Advertisements

Chapter 11 Inductors.
CYCLEOF MAGNETISATION & HYSTERESIS LOSS. TOPICS TO BE DISCUSSED MAGNETIC INDUCTION(B) MAGNETISING FIELD(H) INTENSITY OF MAGNETISATION(I) CYCLE OF MAGNETISATION.
Magnetic Properties. Introduction Magnetism arises from the Magnetic Moment or Magnetic dipole of Magnetic Materials. When the electrons revolves around.
I)Detailed information specifically relating to the section on superconductivity. Some of this information will be needed for the tutorial work.
Martin Wilson Lecture 2 slide1 'Pulsed Superconducting Magnets' CERN Academic Training May 2006 Lecture 2: Magnetization, AC Losses and Filamentary Wires.
Switching Power Supply Component Selection 7.2a Inductor Selection – Terminology.
ELECTROMAGNETIC CANNON. Question  A solenoid can be used to fire a small ball. A capacitor is used to energize the solenoid coil. Build a device with.
First Order Circuit Capacitors and inductors RC and RL circuits.
An Approach to Measure and Model Heat Transfer in He II T. Winkler, T. Koettig, R. van Weelderen, J. Bremer, H.J.M ter Brake BLMTWG - Tiemo.
Summary of the last lecture
INDUCTANCE Plan:  Inductance  Calculating the Inductance  Inductors with Magnetic materials.
Superconductivity and Superfluidity The London penetration depth but also F and H London suggested that not only To which the solution is L is known as.
Chapter 30 Inductance. Self Inductance When a time dependent current passes through a coil, a changing magnetic flux is produced inside the coil and this.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 33 Inductance, Electromagnetic Oscillations, and AC Circuits.
Unit 5 An Introduction to Mechanical Engineering: Part One Electrical and Electronic Systems 5.2 – key points Kirchhoff postulated that in any circuit.
Chapter 1 MAGNETIC CIRCUIT.
Monday, Apr. 24, 2006PHYS , Spring 2006 Dr. Jaehoon Yu 1 PHYS 1444 – Section 501 Lecture #22 Monday, Apr. 24, 2006 Dr. Jaehoon Yu AC Circuit w/
Electromagnetic Induction
Chapter 5 Overview. Electric vs Magnetic Comparison.
Class 34 Today we will: learn about inductors and inductance
ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORY EKT 241/4: ELECTROMAGNETIC THEORY PREPARED BY: NORDIANA MOHAMAD SAAID CHAPTER 4 – MAGNETOSTATICS.
Lectures 17&18: Inductance Learning Objectives To understand and to be able to calculate Self-Inductance To be able to obtain an expression for the Energy.
SIS 100 main magnets G. Moritz, GSI Darmstadt (for E. Fischer, MT-20 4V07)) Cryogenic Expert Meeting, GSI, September 19/
CSCM Project Powering cycle and results of the PSpice simulations Emmanuele Ravaioli Thanks to H. Thiesen, A. Verweij TE-MPE-TM
Martin Wilson Lecture 3 slide1 JUAS Febuary 2012 Lecture 3: Magnetization, cables and ac losses Magnetization magnetization of filaments coupling between.
ENE 325 Electromagnetic Fields and Waves Lecture 6 Capacitance and Magnetostatics 1.
MQY-30: Measurement of magnetic cross-talk with imbalanced powering L. Fiscarelli on behalf of TE/MSC/MM
TE-MPE Workshop 14/12/2010, Manuel Dominguez, TE/MPE-EI 1 Stephen Pemberton, TE/MPE-EI RB Earth Spark Investigation Initial Report. S. Pemberton, G. D’Angelo.
Frequency Transfer Function Measurements during LS1 Emmanuele Ravaioli Thanks to Arjan Verweij, Zinur Charifoulline, Andrea Musso MPE-TM
Proposal for FTF measurements on dipole magnets in the tunnel during the Christmas break Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM
USPAS January 2012, Austin, Texas: Superconducting accelerator magnets Unit 7 AC losses in Superconductors Soren Prestemon and Helene Felice Lawrence Berkeley.
Field Model for the Multipoles Factory FQWG, 17/3/2004 S.Amet, L.Deniau, M.Haverkamp, L.Larsson, T.Pieloni, S.Sanfilippo, M. Schneider, R. Wolf, G.Ambrosio.
1 MAGNETOSTATIC FIELD (MAGNETIC FORCE, MAGNETIC MATERIAL AND INDUCTANCE) CHAPTER FORCE ON A MOVING POINT CHARGE 8.2 FORCE ON A FILAMENTARY CURRENT.
New options for the new D1 magnet Qingjin Xu
Hysteresis When we increased the current we observed, saturation. What would happen if I decrease the current after saturation? The flux for a given H.
Monday, April 23, PHYS , Spring 2007 Dr. Andrew Brandt PHYS 1444 – Section 004 Lecture #19 Monday, April 23, 2007 Dr. Andrew Brandt Inductance.
Cold test of SIS-300 dipole model Sergey Kozub Institute for High Energy Physics (IHEP), Protvino, Moscow region, Russia.
5. Magnetostatics Applied EM by Ulaby, Michielssen and Ravaioli.
AC Losses Measurements at SOTON 1. Objectives 2  Comparison between twisted and non-twisted  Decoupling by twisting: effective diameter of (de)coupling.
Lecture 2: Magnetization, cables and ac losses
Martin Wilson Lecture 2 slide‹#› JUAS Febuary 2016 Lecture 2: Magnetization, cables and ac losses Magnetization superconductors in changing fields magnetization.
Main dipole circuit simulations Behavior and performance analysis PSpice models Simulation results Comparison with QPS data Ongoing activities Emmanuele.
Measurement of LHC Superconducting Dipole and Quadrupole Magnets in Ramp Rate Conditions G.Deferne, CERN Aknowledgements: M. Di Castro, S. Sanfilippo,
Announcements Midterm Exam next Friday In class, ~1 hr. Closed book, one page of notes Bring a calculator (not phone, computer, iPad, etc.) Practice problems.
Tatiana Kozlova, Novosibirsk State University Supervisor: Darryl Orris, TD/Test & Instrumentation Department AC loss measurements of superconducting quadrupole.
Chapter 21 Magnetic Induction and Chapter 22.9: Transformers.
Announcements Midterm Exam next Wednesday Exam starts at 6 PM, ~1 hr. Closed book, one page of notes Bring a calculator (not phone, computer, iPad, etc.)
Mutual Inductance Mutual inductance: a changing current in one coil will induce a current in a second coil: And vice versa; note that the constant M, known.
Equivalent lumped-element
MAGNETIC FIELDS IN MATTER
There will be a quiz next Thursday, April 23
Chapter 11 Inductors.
2012 Applied Superconductivity Conference, Portland, Oregon
Fundamentals of Applied Electromagnetics
Frequency Transfer Function of a dipole What is it Why is it important How to calculate it How to model it How to measure it Emmanuele Ravaioli LHC-CM.
BACK EMF When the coil L is connected in series with the cell V it produces an increasing magnetic field as the current through the coil rises. This induces.
Status of RB circuit modeling PSpice models Simulation results: nQPS & oQPS Comparison with QPS data Ongoing activities Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM
Lecture 3-6 Self Inductance and Mutual Inductance
PHYS 1444 – Section 02 Lecture #19
Mike Sumption, M. Majoros, C. Myers, and E.W. Collings
Electromagnetic Theory
Magnetic Properties.
Transformer -Types & Applications
PHYS 1444 – Section 003 Lecture #21
I. Bogdanov, S. Kozub, V. Pokrovsky, L. Shirshov,
Thermodynamics of a Type I superconductor
Chapter 32 Inductance 32-1 Self-Inductance 32-3 Energy of a Magnetic Field.
5. Magnetostatics 7e Applied EM by Ulaby and Ravaioli.
Chapter 32 Problems 6,7,9,16,29,30,31,37.
Presentation transcript:

Inductance and magnetization measurements on main dipoles in SM18 Emmanuele Ravaioli Thanks to A. Verweij, S. Le Naour TE-MPE-TM

Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM Outline The measured inductance of a main dipole at 0 current is about 80% of its nominal value. This can be observed both in the LHC during normal operation (PMBrowser data), and in the measurement of the frequency transfer function of a dipole in SM18. The measured magnetization is in full agreement with the theoretical magnetization calculated analytically with relations from the literature and the magnetic field calculated by ROXIE. In order to investigate the phenomenon, a series of dedicated tests have been carried out in SM18, featuring current cycles powered by a 4-quadrant power converter [600 A, ±10 V]. The tests showed that indeed the inductance of a main dipole can be far from its nominal value at low current (<300 A). The cause of such a dependency is related to the magnetization effects induced within the cables of the dipole. The magnetization and its effect on the inductance can be calculated. Interesting (and very simple) method for the measurement of the magnetization induced in a magnet: performing a current cycle, measuring V and I, and a little algebra.

LHC – Inductance of a dipole (from PM Browser!) Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM Calculated L of a single dipole during a typical LHC ramp

SM18 – Current cycle Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±600 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated inductance Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±600 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated Inductance vs Current Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±600 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM How to define the inductance? Ability to store energy in a magnetic field. If magnetization is present, L d is not equal to the nominal magnet inductance Is it possible to calculate the magnetization M within a magnet measuring only V and I? Magnetization The persistent currents within the filaments of the magnet cables produce a magnetic moment. The magnetization saturates when the filament is fully penetrated by the magnetic field. This effect spoils the precise shape of the magnetic field. B J J J Courtesy of M. Wilson

Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM How to calculate the magnetization using V and I? With a little algebra one can express M a.u. using only known parameters and measured V and I. The resulting M a.u. is in arbitrary units and needs to be scaled with a factor C scale. The area of the hysteresis loop is proportional to the work done by the system, i.e. to the AC loss in the cycle.

Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM How to scale the calculated magnetization? How to compare the measured magnetization M with a theoretical estimation? In a full cycle, the energy dissipated in the system must equal the energy dissipated in a hysteresis loop. The scaling factor C scale is calculated as the value that balances the energy equality. With a little algebra one can express M using only known parameters and measured V and I. The resulting M is in mT and can be compared with a theoretical curve.

Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM How to estimate the saturation curve of M? B x,s (I) and B y,s (I) from ROXIE The components of the magnetic field of each strand of the magnet cable are calculated with ROXIE for different values of current I The critical current density of each strand is calculated using an experimental formula The magnetization of a strand at saturation is calculated using the Bean model The magnetization of the whole magnet at saturation is calculated as the average magnetization in the strands weighted on the cross section of each strand

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±600 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s The initial magnetization (1) depends on the magnetic history of the magnet. Before the saturation is reached, the magnetization is proportional to the applied field (1≡1a). After the saturation is reached (1b) the magnetization follows the saturation curve (1b≡2). The two subsequent hysteresis cycles (3≡7, 7≡11) are identical. 1a 1b

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±50 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±100 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±200 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±300 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±400 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±500 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±600 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM Summary The measured inductance of a main dipole at 0 current is about 80% of its nominal value. This can be observed both in the LHC during normal operation (PMBrowser data), and from the measurement of the frequency transfer function in SM18. The measured magnetization is in full agreement with the theoretical magnetization calculated analytically with relations from the literature and the magnetic field calculated by ROXIE. In order to investigate the phenomenon, a series of dedicated tests have been carried out in SM18, featuring current cycles powered by a 4-quadrant power converter [600 A, ±10 V]. The tests showed that indeed the inductance of a main dipole can be far from its nominal value at low current (<300 A). The cause of such a dependency is related to the magnetization effects induced within the cables of the dipole. The magnetization and its effect on the inductance can be calculated. Interesting (and very simple) method for the measurement of the magnetization induced in a magnet: performing a current cycle, measuring V and I, and a little algebra.

Annex 20 Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM

21 Adopted symbols VVoltage across the magnet ICurrent flowing through the magnet dI/dtCurrent ramp rate ΦMagnetic flux L d Differential inductance BMagnetic induction HMagnetic field MMagnetization SMagnetic surface f M Magnetic transfer function L nom Nominal inductance of the magnet μ 0 Vacuum permeability M a.u. Magnetization (arbitrary units) C scale Scaling factor iIndex of the i-th measurement point c 1, c 2, c 3, c 4, c 5, c 6, c 7, T c0, B c2 B x,s Magnetic induction towards x in strand s B y,s Magnetic induction towards y in strand s B s Magnetic induction in strand s TTemperature I c,s Critical current in strand s J c,SC,s Critical current density in the SC of strand s M s Magnetization of strand s A SC,s Area of superconducting material in strand s d s Diameter of a strand of the magnet cable n s Number of strands of the magnet cable f SC,s Fill factor (Superconductor ratio) d f Diameter of a filament of the magnet cable Experimental parameters

SM18 – Calculated Magnetization vs Magnetic field Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±600 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

SM18 – Calculated magnetization Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM MBA_1089I = ±600 AdI/dt = ±10 A/s

LHC – Current ramp (from PM Browser!) Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM V_meas, I_meas, dI_meas/dt, L during a typical LHC ramp

Results – FTF – Dependence on the current levelG ain Emmanuele Ravaioli TE-MPE-TM Configuration 2120 A – 2 kAWithout parallel resistorLow f