Cold deformed copper matrix composite conductors, developed for use in the 100 tesla multi-shot pulsed magnet at the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory (NHMFL), have been characterized. The conductors are alumina strengthened copper which is fabricated by cold drawing that introduces high dislocation densities and high internal stresses. Both alumina particles and high density of dislocations provide us with high tensile strength and fatigue endurance. The conductors also have high electrical conductivities because alumina has limited solubility in Cu and dislocations have little scattering effect on conduction electrons. Such a combination of high strength and high conductivity makes it an excellent candidate over other resistive magnet materials. Thus, characterization is carried out by tensile testing and fully reversible fatigue testing. In tensile tests, the material exceeds the design criteria parameters. In the fatigue tests, both the load and displacement were measured and used to control the amplitude of the tests to simulate the various loading conditions in the pulsed magnet which is operated at 77 K in a non-destructive mode. In order to properly simulate the pulsed magnet operation, strain-controlled tests were more suitable than load controlled tests. For the dispersion strengthened coppers, the strengthening mechanism of the aluminum oxide provided better tensile and fatigue properties over convention copper.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
27 January 2014
ADVANCES IN CRYOGENIC ENGINEERING: Transactions of the International Cryogenic Materials Conference ICMC Volume 60
17–21 June 2013
Anchorage, Alaska, USA
Research Article|
January 27 2014
Cryogenic properties of dispersion strengthened copper for high magnetic fields
V. J. Toplosky;
V. J. Toplosky
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee, FL 32310,
USA
Search for other works by this author on:
K. Han;
K. Han
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee, FL 32310,
USA
Search for other works by this author on:
R. P. Walsh;
R. P. Walsh
National High Magnetic Field Laboratory, Tallahassee, FL 32310,
USA
Search for other works by this author on:
C. A. Swenson
C. A. Swenson
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA 94720,
USA
Search for other works by this author on:
AIP Conf. Proc. 1574, 67–74 (2014)
Citation
V. J. Toplosky, K. Han, R. P. Walsh, C. A. Swenson; Cryogenic properties of dispersion strengthened copper for high magnetic fields. AIP Conf. Proc. 27 January 2014; 1574 (1): 67–74. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4860606
Download citation file:
213
Views
Citing articles via
Inkjet- and flextrail-printing of silicon polymer-based inks for local passivating contacts
Zohreh Kiaee, Andreas Lösel, et al.
Effect of coupling agent type on the self-cleaning and anti-reflective behaviour of advance nanocoating for PV panels application
Taha Tareq Mohammed, Hadia Kadhim Judran, et al.
Students’ mathematical conceptual understanding: What happens to proficient students?
Dian Putri Novita Ningrum, Budi Usodo, et al.
Related Content
OBSERVATIONS FROM THE ANALYSIS OF THERMOHYDRAULIC BEHAVIOR OF THE SERIES‐CONNECTED HYBRID MAGNETS SUPERCONDUCTING OUTSERTS
AIP Conference Proceedings (April 2010)
Current leads cooling for the series-connected hybrid magnets
AIP Conference Proceedings (January 2014)
The cryogenic system for the SCH and the 45 T hybrid at the NHMFL
AIP Conference Proceedings (June 2012)
Axial Reverse‐Cycle Fatigue Tests of High Strength Pulse Magnet Conductors at 77 K
AIP Conference Proceedings (June 2004)
Design of N 2 cooled Bi-2223 HTS current leads for use in 0.4T field for the NHMFL series-connected hybrid magnet
AIP Conference Proceedings (January 2014)