A persistent-mode 0.5 T solid-nitrogen-cooled MgB2 magnet for MRI.

Supercond Sci Technol

Francis Bitter Magnet Lab, Plasma Science and Fusion Center, Massachusetts Institute Technology, 170 Albany St, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

Published: February 2017

This paper presents construction details and test results of a persistent-mode 0.5-T MgB magnet developed at the Francis Bitter Magnet Lab, MIT. The magnet, of 276-mm inner diameter and 290-mm outer diameter, consisted of a stack of 8 solenoidal coils with a total height of 460 mm. Each coil was wound with monofilament MgB wire, equipped with a persistent-current switch and terminated with a superconducting joint, forming an individual superconducting loop. Resistive solder joints connected the 8 coils in series. The magnet, after being integrated into a testing system, immersed in solid nitrogen, was operated in a temperature range of 10-13 K. A two-stage cryocooler was deployed to cool a radiation shield and the cold mass that included mainly ~60 kg of solid nitrogen and the magnet. The solid nitrogen was capable of providing a uniform and stable cryogenic environment to the magnet. The magnet sustained a 0.47-T magnetic field at its center persistently in a range of 10-13 K. The current in each coil was inversely calculated from the measured field profile to determine the performance of each coil in persistent-mode operation. Persistent-current switches were successfully operated in solid nitrogen for ramping the magnet. They were also designed to absorb magnetic energy in a protection mechanism; its effectiveness was evaluated in an induced quench.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5613760PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1361-6668/30/2/024011DOI Listing

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