Superconducting
magnets are electro
magnets that are partially built from
superconducting materials and therefore reach much higher
magnetic field intensity.
The
coil windings of superconducting
magnets are made of wires of a type 2
superconductor (mostly used is niobium-titanium - up to 15
Tesla the critical temperature is less then 10
Kelvin). These coils have no resistance when operated at temperatures near
absolute zero (-273.15°C, -459°F, 0 K).
Liquid
helium (4.2 K) is commonly used as a coolant (sometimes in addition with a
second cryogen liquid nitrogen as an intermediate thermal shield to reduce the boil-off rate of liquid
helium), which consequently conclude refilling (intervals: liquid
helium ~ 3 month, liquid nitrogen ~ 2 weeks). There are cryogen-free superconducting
magnets with a closed-cycle refrigerating system at the horizon. Superconducting
magnets typically exhibit field strengths of greater than 0.5 T, operate clinically up to 3 T, and have a horizontal field
orientation, which makes them prone to missile effects without significant
magnetic shielding.
See also
Quenching.
See also the related poll result: '
In 2010 your scanner will probably work with a field strength of'