Liquid neon heat transfer as applied to a 30 tesla cryomagnet
Abstract
Since superconducting magnets cooled by liquid helium are limited to magnetic fields of about 18 teslas, the design of a 30 tesla cryomagnet necessitates forced convection liquid neon heat transfer in small coolant channels. As these channels are too small to handle the vapor flow if the coolant were to boil, the design philosophy calls for suppressing boiling by subjecting the fluid to high pressures. Forced convection heat transfer data are obtained by using a blowdown technique to force the fluid vertically through a resistance-heated instrumented tube. The data are obtained at inlet temperatures between 28 and 34 K and system pressures between 28 to 29 bars. Data correlation is limited to a very narrow range of test conditions, since the tests were designed to simulate the heat transfer characteristics in the coolant channels of the 30 tesla cryomagnet concerned. The results can therefore be applied directly to the design of the magnet system.-
- Publication:
-
Cryogenic Engineering Conference
- Pub Date:
- July 1975
- Bibcode:
- 1975cgen.conf.....P
- Keywords:
-
- Convective Heat Transfer;
- Cryogenic Magnets;
- Forced Convection;
- Liquid Neon;
- Resistance Heating;
- Superconducting Magnets;
- Channel Flow;
- Design Analysis;
- Gas Flow;
- Liquid Cooling;
- Magnetic Field Configurations;
- Nucleate Boiling;
- Vapor Pressure;
- Engineering (General)