System and method for energizing a superconducting magnet
US-9810755-B2 · Nov 7, 2017 · US
US10775455B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-10775455-B2 |
| Application number | US-201815939708-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Mar 29, 2018 |
| Priority date | Mar 29, 2018 |
| Publication date | Sep 15, 2020 |
| Grant date | Sep 15, 2020 |
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In a superconducting magnet arrangement, such as used in a magnetic resonance system, and a power management method therefor, an enhanced economic power mode (EPM) is implemented wherein the compressor operation is controlled by magnet pressure, temperature and time, so as to ensure the readiness of the magnet system for a scanning operation upon exiting the enhanced EPM. A processor implementing the enhanced EPM looks for a signal that indicates that the magnet system is operational and, in the absence of that signal for a predetermined period of time, enters into EPM. Exit from EPM occurs if certain conditions are violated, but then re-entry into EPM is attempted (re-starting EPM), thereby making the magnet system ready for operation again, if and when a patient scan is to be implemented.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A method for power management of a superconducting magnet, comprising: in a computer in communication with a cryogen-cooled superconducting magnet, continuously detecting a presence of a predetermined signal from the superconducting magnet that indicates that the superconducting magnet is in a predetermined operating state, in which said superconducting magnet consumes power; when said predetermined signal is not detected by said computer for a predetermined time duration, automatically emitting at least one further signal from the computer to the superconducting magnet that places said superconducting magnet in a power-saving mode, which includes a power reduction phase in which said computer places said superconducting magnet in a power-saving state in which said superconducting magnet consumes less power than in said predetermined operating state; throughout said power-saving mode, monitoring, in said computer, a predetermined combination of pressure, temperature and operational times of at least one selected component of said superconducting magnet in order to detect if and when said combination satisfies a predetermined exit condition and, if said predetermined exit condition is detected in said computer, emitting further signals from said computer to said superconducting magnet that take said superconducting magnet out of said power-saving mode; and in said computer, after said superconducting magnet exits said power-saving mode, monitoring said superconducting magnet from said computer in order to detect an occurrence of predetermined re-entry conditions and automatically returning said superconducting magnet to said power-saving mode if said re-entry conditions are detected. 2. A method as claimed in claim 1 comprising, in said power-saving mode, providing signals from said computer to said superconducting magnet that initially place said superconducting magnet in a stabilization phase, before placing said superconducting magnet in said power reduction phase, in which said superconducting magnet is ready to rapidly return to said predetermined operational state if and when said exit condition is detected. 3. A method as claimed in claim 2 wherein said superconducting magnet comprises a cryogen vessel that contains a cryogen, a cryogen compressor that operates to place the cryogen at a cryogen pressure in said cryogen vessel, a coldhead in said cryogen vessel that operates to maintain the cryogen in a liquid state, and a pressure heater that operates to elevate a temperature of the cryogen in the cryogen vessel and wherein said method comprises: in said stabilization phase, emitting control signals from said computer that maintain said helium compressor and said coldhead operational, with said pressure heater being inactive, and detecting when said cryogen vessel pressure reaches a target pressure and maintaining said superconducting magnet in said stabilization phase as long as said cryogen vessel pressure exceeds said target pressure. 4. A method as claimed in claim 3 comprising, from said computer, operating said superconducting magnet in said power-saving mode in a recondensing phase between said stabilization phase and said power reduction phase and, during said recondensing phase, emitting control signals from said computer to said cryogen compressor and said pressure heater to regulate said cryogen vessel pressure with respect to said target pressure, while also monitoring, in said computer, a recondensing phase time duration and, if and when said recondensing phase time duration elapses, then operating said superconducting magnet from said computer in said power reduction phase. 5. A method as claimed in claim 4 comprising, in said power reduction phase, deactivating said cryogen compressor from said computer and monitoring a temperature of said coldhead, and restarting said cryogen compressor if said coldhead temperature exceeds a predetermined maximum value, or if a power reduction phase time duration has elapsed. 6. A computer for power management of a superconducting magnet, comprising: a processor configured to communicate with a cryogen-cooled superconducting magnet, so as to continuously detect a presence of a predetermined signal from the superconducting magnet that indicates that the superconducting magnet is in a predetermined operating state, in which said superconducting magnet consumes power; when said predetermined signal is not detected by said processor for a predetermined time duration, said processor being configured automatically emit at least one further signal from the computer to the superconducting magnet that places said superconducting magnet in a power-saving mode, which includes a power reduction phase in which said processor places said superconducting magnet in a power-saving state in which said superconducting magnet consumes less power than in said predetermined operating state; throughout said power-saving mode, said processor being configured to monitor in said computer, a predetermined combination of pressure, temperature and operational times of at least one selected component of said superconducting magnet in order to detect if and when said combination satisfies a predetermined exit condition and, if said predetermined exit condition is detected in said processor, said processor being configured to emit further signals from said processor to said superconducting magnet that take said superconducting magnet out of said power-saving mode; and said processor being configured, after said superconducting magnet exits said power-saving mode, to monitor said superconducting magnet in order to detect an occurrence of predetermined re-entry conditions and to automatically return said superconducting magnet to said power-saving mode if said re-entry conditions are detected. 7. A computer as claimed in claim 6 wherein said processor, in said power-saving mode, is configured to provide signals from said processor to said superconducting magnet that initially place said superconducting magnet in a stabilization phase, before placing said superconducting magnet in said power reduction phase, in which said superconducting magnet is ready to rapidly return to said predetermined operational state if and when said exit condition is detected. 8. A computer as claimed in claim 7 wherein said superconducting magnet comprises a cryogen vessel that contains a cryogen, a cryogen compressor that operates to place the cryogen at a cryogen pressure in said cryogen vessel, a coldhead in said cryogen vessel that operates to maintain the cryogen in a liquid state, and a pressure heater that operates to elevate a temperature of the cryogen in the cryogen vessel and wherein: said processor is configured, in said stabilization phase, to emit control signals from said processor that maintain said helium compressor and said coldhead operational, with said pressure heater being inactive, and to detect when said cryogen vessel pressure reaches a target pressure and to maintain said superconducting magnet in said stabilization phase as long as said cryogen vessel pressure exceeds said target pressure. 9. A computer as claimed in claim 8 wherein said processor is configured to operate said superconducting magnet in said power-saving mode in a recondensing phase between said stabilization phase and said power reduction phase and, during said recondensing phase, to emit control signals from said processor to said cryogen compressor and said pressure heater to regulate said cryogen vessel pressure with respect to said target pressure, and to also monitor a recondensing phase time duration and, if and when said recondensing phase time duration elapses, to then operate said superconducting magnet from sa
Additional hardware for cooling or heating of the magnet assembly, for housing a cooled or heated part of the magnet assembly or for temperature control of the magnet assembly · CPC title
Supplying energising or de-energising current; Flux pumps · CPC title
Cooling · CPC title
characterised by the cycle used, e.g. Stirling cycle · CPC title
with superconducting coils, e.g. power supply therefor · CPC title
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