Current distribution among the wires of multi-strand superconducting cables
is an important item for accelerator magnets. A non-uniform distribution c
ould cause additional held distortions in the magnet bore and can as well b
e one of the reasons of premature quenching. Since two years electrical mea
surements on superconducting Rutherford-type cables are performed at CERN a
s part of the reception tests for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Cable sa
mples of 2.4 m length are tested at currents up to 32 kA, temperatures arou
nd 1.9 and 4.3 K, and fields up to 10 T, applied perpendicularly as well as
parallel to the broad face of the cable. Last year, an array of 24 Hall pr
obes was installed in the test set-up in order to measure the self-field of
the cable samples along one cable pitch. Each of the probes measures the l
ocal field generated by the current in the strands close by, and the result
s of the all probes reflect therefore the distribution of the strand curren
ts. Experiments are done varying the applied field and its direction, the t
emperature, the cable current ramp-rate, the strand-to-strand contact resis
tance and the cable joint resistances. In many cases a current imbalance is
observed at lower currents, which at higher currents leads to either a cur
rent redistribution or to a premature quench. The main aim of the paper is
to show the possibilities and importance of this type of measurements, and
to present first experiments and results. Many tests are performed to under
stand the qualitative trends, but are often quantitatively not directly rep
resentative for the behavior of the cable in real magnets.' (C) 2001 Publis
hed by Elsevier Science Ltd.