Hello there! This is really more of a mechanical question.
I am making a cryogenic Heat switch. This is like an electrical switch, but for heat flow instead of current.
It involves a superconducting solenoid, and a superconducting junction to act as the switch.
My concern lies in the design of the former, the brass part you see here that the magnet wire winds around.
There are 4 layers of 100micron wire. There are 200 turns per layer. The wound section is 2cm long, which gives us a turn density of roughly 40,000 turns/meter.
1 Amp will be flowing through this superconducting wire when the coil is energized.
The wire comes in and immediately undergoes a sharp bend via a slot. Then, the wire is wound, and after the 4th layer, the wire is back at the side the winding started. it leaves the windings through a similar slot.
How can I design this such that there are no sharp bends in the wire that may cause it to kink, or damage the insulation of the wire? I have tried filing and scraping at the corners, but they still have quite a small radius of curvature.
If you have any design considerations, i would love to hear them!
thank you for reading.
you can see here that the wire is fed in, goes into a sharp bend, then gets wound.
for those interested.