Abstract

In 2010, we reported, for the first time, the no-insulation (NI) winding technique for high-temperature superconducting (HTS) pancake coils. Based on our test results of small NbTi NI coils, reported in 2011, the key benefits, i.e., enhanced mechanical integrity, compactness, and thermal stability, of the NI winding technique, appear intact for low-temperature superconducting (LTS) windings. However, the intrinsic charging delay observed in NI coils, caused by the lack of insulation, is more pronounced in LTS coils of a bare round wire than in HTS pancakes of thin, wide tape. Thus, to significantly reduce the charging delay in LTS coils of a bare round wire, we proposed a partial-insulation (PI) winding technique, a variation of the NI technique. In the PI winding of a bare round wire, a thin insulation sheet is introduced every few layers-note that in the PI winding, there are no turn-to-turn insulations. This paper reports results, experimental and analytical, of the PI winding technique in which bare-round-wire NI and PI coils were prepared to quantify the effects of PI winding technique. Three LTS coils of the identical dimension and magnet constant were wound with 0.4 mm diameter NbTi mono-filament wire and tested in a bath of liquid helium at 4.2 K, respectively, with three winding techniques: insulated (INS); NI; and PI. We analyzed the experimental results by applying an equivalent circuit model that had earlier been successfully applied to another set of experimental results. A graph model of resistance matrix was applied to estimate characteristic resistance of both NI and PI coils.

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