Method and apparatus for cooling an oxide superconducting coil

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62 511, F27B 1900

Patent

active

054776937

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
FIELD OF THE ART

This invention relates to a method and an apparatus for cooling an oxide superconducting coil or a bulk superconducting material and is intended to provide a technology of cooling oxide superconducting coils at temperature lower than the boiling point of liquid nitrogen under the atmospheric pressure and preventing the creep phenomenon of the magnetic flux of a superconducting coil.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

A superconducting material exhibits its superconductivity at and below its critical temperature (Tc) and oxide superconducting materials having a relatively high critical temperature (Tc) are expected to find applications at the boiling point, or 77 K., of liquid nitrogen. Two methods are generally used for cooling superconducting materials. One involves the use of a freezer and the other utilizes liquid helium or nitrogen as a medium of freezing. The latter is normally recommended for cooling superconducting coils and bulk superconducting materials from the viewpoints of rapid conduct ion of heat, enhanced thermal conductivity and even distribution of heat. Liquidized helium is often used under reduced pressure at temperature below 2.19 K. to keep it in a superfluid state. In view of the above described facts and other considerations, the temperature at which a bulk oxide superconducting material is used is preferably 2.19 K., 4.2 K. or 77 K.
A superconducting material normally needs to be cooled considerably below its critical temperature in order to ensure its desired properties in a stable manner under high electric current density condition. While the use of liquid helium (2.19 K., 4.2 K.) as cooling medium provides an advantage of increased critical electric current density when compared with the use of liquid nitrogen, it is accompanied by the disadvantage of high cost and difficulty of handling. As for the use of liquid nitrogen (77 K.), on the other hand, there has been a report that a QMG material prepared by a quench and melt growth method and cooled by liquid nitrogen (77 K.) exhibited a Jc value of 30,000 A/cm.sup.2 in a magnetic field of 1 T ("New Superconducting Materials Forum News"; No. 10, p. 15) and another report says that a Jc value as high as 4,000 A/cm.sup.2 has been achieved by using a Bi-type silver-sheathed wire, suggesting that such superconducting materials may find practical applications in near future. It is widely recognized, however, that a new or improved cooling method has to be proposed that can cool oxide superconducting materials below 77 K. in a stable manner, using easily handled liquid nitrogen as cooling medium so that the superconducting properties of such materials may be fully exploited.
It has also been reported that a maximum magnetic flux density of 1.35 X 10.sup.-2 T was achieved at 77 K. by a bulk magnet made of a QMG material but it was accompanied by creep phenomenon in the magnetic flux of the QMG material that gradually attenuates the density of magnetic flux with time. Therefore, there is also urgent need for a remedy for such creep.


Disclosure of the Invention

In view of the above described problems, it is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a method and an apparatus for cooling a bulk oxide superconductive material or a bulk magnet by using liquid nitrogen which is available at low cost and easy to handle.
The present invention essentially has two aspects. In one aspect, it provides means of stably cooling a superconducting body to the triple point temperature (63.1 K.) of nitrogen which is obtained by cooling nitrogen by reducing pressure and, in the other, it provides means of stably cooling a superconducting body at approximately 63.9 K. under the atmospheric pressure by utilizing the latent heat of phase transition of nitrogen involving liquid and solid phases.
More specifically, according to the first aspect of the present invention, the above object is achieved by providing a method for cooling an oxide superconducting coil and stably keeping it at a constant temperature, comprising steps of intr

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