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Solid-Cryogen Cooling Technique for Superconducting Magnets of NMR and MRI

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Plasma Science and Fusion Center
Francis Bitter Magnet Laboratory (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Iwasa, Yukikazu
Bascunan, Juan
Hahn, Seung-Yong
Park, Dong Keun
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Plasma Science and Fusion Center
Francis Bitter Magnet Laboratory (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Iwasa, Yukikazu
Bascunan, Juan
Hahn, Seung-Yong
Park, Dong Keun
Source :
Elsevier
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

This paper describes a solid-cryogen cooling technique currently being developed at the M.I.T. Francis Bitter Magnet Laboratory for application to superconducting magnets of NMR and MRI. The technique is particularly appropriate for “dry” magnets that do not rely on liquid cryogen, e.g., liquid helium (LHe), as their primary cooling sources. In addition, the advantages of a cryocirculator (a combination of a cryocooler and a working fluid circulator) over a cryocooler as the primary cooling source for dry magnets are described. The four magnets described here, all incorporating this cooling technique described and currently being developed at the FBML, are: 1) a solid-nitrogen (SN[subscript 2])-cooled Nb[subscript 3]Sn 500-MHz/200-mm MRI magnet with an operating temperature range between 4.2 K (nominal) and 6.0 K (maximum with its primary cooling source off); 2) an SN[subscript 2]-cooled MgB[subscript 2] 0.5-T/800-mm MRI magnet, 1015 K; 3) an SN[subscript 2]-cooled compact YBCO “annulus” 100-MHz/9-mm NMR magnet, 10-15 K; 4) an SN2-cooled 1.5T/75-mm NbTi magnet for slow magic-angle-spinning NMR/MRI, 4.5-5.5 K.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Elsevier
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn896819498
Document Type :
Electronic Resource