Abstract
We succeeded in upgrading the 920-MHz nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) superconducting magnet (21.6 T) to 1020 MHz (24.0 T) by replacing the innermost Nb3Sn coil with a (Bi,Pb)2Sr2Ca2Cu3O10 (Bi-2223) coil. The 920-MHz NMR spectrometer had been installed in the National Institute for Materials Science, Tsukuba, Japan, in 2001. It has been operated in the persistent mode for six years. The upgrading project started in 2006. A Bi-2223 coil was developed as the innermost coil instead of the Nb3Sn one. The newly installed Bi-2223 innermost coil is connected to Nb3Sn and NbTi coils in series. The upgraded NMR magnet was seriously damaged by the Great East Japan Earthquake in March 2011. After more than two years of restoration and additional improvements of current leads and the power supply system, the magnet was cooled down to below 1.8 K in August 2014. The magnet successfully generated 24.0 T, corresponding to 1020 MHz, in October 2014. To achieve the required homogeneity and stability of the magnetic field, not only superconducting and room-temperature shim coils but also ferromagnetic shims were used. The 1020-MHz superconducting NMR magnet has been operated in a power-supply-driven mode for six months.
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