Abstract

Accelerator magnets that can reach magnetic fields well beyond the Nb-Ti performance limits are presently being built and developed, using Nb3Sn superconductors. This technology requires reaction heat treatment (RHT) of the magnet coils, during which Nb3Sn is formed from its ductile precursor materials (a “wind and react” approach). The Nb3Sn microstructure and microchemistry are strongly influenced by the conductor fabrication route, and by the phase changes during RHT. By combining in situ differential scanning calorimetry, high energy synchrotron x-ray diffraction, and micro-tomography experiments, we have acquired a unique data set that describes in great detail the phase and microstructure changes that take place during the processing of restacked rod process (RRP), powder-in-tube (PIT), and internal tin (IT) Nb3Sn wires. At temperatures below 450 °C the phase evolutions in the three wire types are similar, with respectively solid state interdiffusion of Cu and Sn, Cu6Sn5 formation, and Cu6Sn5 peritectic transformation. Distinct differences in phase evolutions in the wires are found when temperatures exceed 450 °C. The volume changes of the conductor during RHT are a difficulty in the production of Nb3Sn accelerator magnets. We compare the wire diameter changes measured in situ by dilatometry with the phase and void volume evolution of the three types of Nb3Sn wire. Unlike the Nb3Sn wire length changes, the wire diameter evolution is characteristic for each Nb3Sn wire type. The strongest volume increase, of about 5%, is observed in the RRP wire, where the main diameter increase occurs above 600 °C upon Nb3Sn formation.

Highlights

  • With the present Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1] superconducting main magnets, Nb-Ti technology has reached its Supercond

  • We have studied the endothermic and exothermic phase transformations and the volume changes during reaction heat treatment (RHT) of Nb3Sn wires produced by three fabrication routes

  • In combination with in situ dilation measurements, the complex Nb3Sn wire volume change behavior could be associated with distinct phase changes

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Summary

Introduction

With the present Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1] superconducting main magnets, Nb-Ti technology has reached its Supercond. The generation of high field accelerator magnets, presently being built for the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) upgrade [2, 3] and developed for the Future Circular Collider (FCC) project [4, 5], relies on Nb3Sn superconductors. There are three main processes for the fabrication of multifilament Nb3Sn wires: the Bronze Route, and the internal tin (IT) and powder-in-tube (PIT) processes [6]. Multifilament wires made by the PIT process and by the restacked rod process (RRP), which is one of several IT processes, can achieve the high critical current densities needed for HL-LHC accelerator magnets

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