Characterization of low temperature high voltage axial insulator breaks for the ITER cryogenic supply line Articles uri icon

authors

  • FERNANDEZ PISON, MARIA DEL PILAR
  • SGOBBA, S.
  • AVILES SANTILLANA, I.
  • LANGESLAG, S.A.E
  • SU, M.
  • PICCIN, R.
  • JOURNEAUX, J.Y.
  • LAURENTI, A.
  • PAN, W.

publication date

  • July 2017

start page

  • 1

end page

  • 8

issue

  • 012007

volume

  • 279

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 1757-8981

Electronic International Standard Serial Number (EISSN)

  • 1757-899X

abstract

  • Cable-in-conduit conductors of the ITER magnet system are directly cooled by supercritical helium. Insulation breaks are required in the liquid helium feed pipes to isolate the high voltage system of the magnet windings from the electrically grounded helium coolant supply line. They are submitted to high voltages and significant internal helium pressure and will experience mechanical forces resulting from differential thermal contraction and electro-mechanical loads. Insulation breaks consist essentially of stainless steel tubes overwrapped by an outer glass - fiber reinforced composite and bonded to an inner composite tube at each end of the stainless steel fittings. For some types of insulator breaks Glass - Kapton - Glass insulation layers are interleaved in the outer composite. Following an extensive mechanical testing campaign at cryogenic temperature combined with leak tightness tests, the present paper investigates through non-destructive and destructive techniques the physical and microstructural characteristics of the low temperature high voltage insulation breaks and of their individual components, thus allowing to correlate the structure and properties of the constituents to their overall performance. For all the tests performed, consistent and reproducible results were obtained within the range of the strict acceptance criteria defined for safe operation of the insulation breaks.

subjects

  • Industrial Engineering
  • Materials science and engineering
  • Physics