MC7.T10 Superconducting Magnets
SUPG083
Mapping of an SRF electron gun focusing solenoid assembly
SLAC’s LCLS-II-HE upgrade will expand the energy regime of their XFEL at high repetition rates. Due to the low emittance requirement, a superconducting QWR based electron gun was proposed by SLAC and is being developed by FRIB in collaboration with ANL and HZDR. The emittance compensation solenoid consists of two main coils, along with horizontal and vertical dipoles as well as normal and skew quadrupole correctors. To validate the performance and characterize the field profile of the magnet, we developed a mapper system. We utilized a SENIS 3D Hall probe on a cantilevered rail driven by an Arduino controlled stepper motor. With high repeatability, we were able to measure peak field strengths and fall off. Further data analysis allowed us to determine their relative locations, in addition to confirming alignment and integrated field strengths. In accordance with design specifications, we measured the peak solenoid fields to be about 172mT and their centers to be less than 0.1mm apart transversely. The mapping design, assembly, process, analysis, and lessons learned are discussed herein.
  • C. Jones, H. Nguyen, X. Du
    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, Michigan State University
  • C. Adolphsen, J. Smedley
    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
  • J. Lewellen
    Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • J. Wenstrom
    Michigan State University
  • T. Xu, Y. Choi
    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote
SUPG084
Status of coil-dominated discrete-cosine-theta quadrupole prototype for high rigidity isotope beams
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Iron-dominated superconducting magnets are one of the most popular and used design choices for superconducting magnetic quadrupoles for accelerator systems. While the iron yoke and pole tips are economic and effective in shaping the field, the large amount of iron also leads to certain drawbacks, namely, unwanted harmonics from the sextupole correctors nested inside of quadrupole iron pole tips. Additional problems include the nonlinear field profile present in the high-field regime caused by the presence of steel, the cryogenic design challenges of the iron yoke being part of the cold mass, and the mechanical challenges of mounting the sextupole and octupole, which will generate significant forces for apertures of the size being proposed. The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams is developing a coil dominated quadrupole as a future upgrade, and the presented work discusses the advantages of using an iron-free quadrupole, along with the methods and choices of the design and the current status of prototype fabrication. The methods and work presented will include the model results and the aspects of the model that have been verified up to the current status of prototype fabrication.
  • D. Greene, T. Xu, Y. Choi
    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
  • D. Zhang, P. Ostroumov, R. Koschay, X. Du, Y. Al-Mahmoud
    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, Michigan State University
  • J. Wenstrom
    Michigan State University
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS67
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 22 May 2024 — Accepted: 23 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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SUPG085
The FORTRESS beamline at Tsinghua university
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High-brightness photoinjectors generate low emittance, ultrashort electron beams that are capable of tracking dynamical states of matter with atomic-scale spatio-temporal resolutions via ultrafast electron scattering, as well as providing precisely-shaped electron beams for advanced acceleration research and large-scale facilities such as free-electron laser and inverse Compton scattering. In this paper, we report on the status of the newly constructed FORTRESS (Facility Of Relativistic Time-Resolved Electron Source and Scattering) beamline at Tsinghua University, which will be dedicated for studies of advanced electron sources and photocathodes, new electron beam manipulation and characterization methods, and ultrafast electron scattering applications. The layout, beam dynamics simulation, initial beam measurement results, as well as main hardware components will be discussed in detail.
  • P. Lv, Z. Wang, Y. Yang, Y. Wang, Q. Gao, Y. Jia, B. Song, Q. Tian, Y. Qin, L. Yun, K. Chen, J. Shi, L. Yan, J. Yang, Y. Du, W. Huang, C. Tang, R. Li
    Tsinghua University in Beijing
  • B. Huang
    Tsinghua University
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPC16
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 21 May 2024 — Accepted: 21 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS61
Mapping the stray magnetic field at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider tunnel
2836
A new Rapid Cycling Synchrotron (RCS) [1] is designed to accelerate the electron bunches from 400 MeV up to 18 GeV for the Electron Ion Collider (EIC) [2] being built at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). One of the two Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) rings will serve as the Hadron Storage Ring (HSR) of the EIC. Beam physics simulations for the RCS demonstrate that the electron beam is sensitive to the outside magnetic field in the tunnel. Significant magnetic fields are expected due to the HSR and the Electron Storage Ring (ESR) being at full energy during the RCS operation. The earth magnetic field at the location of the RCS center was measured throughout the circumference of 3870 m tunnel without RHIC operation. In addition, the fringe magnetic field from RHIC magnets at several locations during RHIC operation was measured and compared with simulation at different ramping currents. A robotic technology is being developed to automatically measure the stray magnetic field at any location during the RHIC (or future EIC) operation.
  • P. Xu, Y. Bai
    Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)
  • G. Mahler, H. Witte, K. Drees, Q. Wu
    Brookhaven National Laboratory
Paper: WEPS61
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS61
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 20 May 2024 — Accepted: 20 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS62
Superconducting dipole for Elettra 2.0
2840
Elettra 2.0 is the 4th generation synchrotron light source that is going to replace Elettra, the 3rd generation light source operating for 30 years in Trieste Italy. The new ring will be giving light to the users in 2026 at 2.4 GeV. Three beam lines require very hard-x-rays i.e. photon energies at 50 keV or more with a flux of 1013 ph/sec and this can be achieved with a superconducting magnet at 6 T peak field. A new superconducting magnet is developed with an innovative compact design integrated with quadrupole side magnets. A new cryogenic solution will combine the benefits of a liquid-helium cooled inner magnet with a liquid-helium-free upper cooling stage. A C-shaped design will allow to slip in and slip out the magnet from its position on the storage ring vacuum chamber. A prototype of a new 6T superconducting magnet will be constructed and installed in the storage ring to replace a normal 1.4 T magnet allowing a full characterization of its performance. The NbTi superconducting magnet will work at 3.5K conduction cooled, using a system of heat exchanger connected to a subcooled Helium bath.
  • M. Modica, A. Fabris, D. Castronovo, D. Caiazza, E. Karantzoulis, S. Di Mitri
    Elettra-Sincrotrone Trieste S.C.p.A.
Paper: WEPS62
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS62
About:  Received: 14 May 2024 — Revised: 20 May 2024 — Accepted: 20 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS63
Mechanical design of the 12 T superconducting dipole. An accelerator-fit, Nb₃Sn double aperture magnet
2843
In the context of the High Field Magnet programme, the 12 T Nb3Sn activity aims to design and manufacture a 2-meter-long, 12 T, cosθ, double aperture dipole. To reach magnetic fields higher than 10 T in accelerator magnets, brittle epoxy-impregnated Nb3Sn Rutherford cables are employed, which makes it difficult to predict the coil's mechanical limit and, in extenso, the magnet's performance. To tackle this challenge, expensive procedures are often implemented. The 12 T mechanical design presented in this paper aims to prioritize intrinsically safe structures and minimize the number of components. This approach is intended to counteract issues stemming from fabrication tolerances and assembly tool misalignment. To prevent coil over-compression, mechanical stoppers are integrated within the magnet structure. The design is committed to focus on solutions that can be applied on short demonstrators but also scaled to long magnets that need to be produced in large quantities in series. This paper aims to introduce the magnet's mechanical design, its underlying principles, and the advantages it offers.
  • M. Masci, L. Baudin
    European Organization for Nuclear Research
  • D. Perini
    European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)
Paper: WEPS63
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS63
About:  Received: 10 May 2024 — Revised: 18 May 2024 — Accepted: 19 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS64
Measurement of integrated gradient and field quality on the first Q2 magnets for HL-LHC
2847
The Q2 insertion quadrupoles for the High Luminosity upgrade of the LHC are currently being produced and tested. The test of the first units provides valuable information about the field quality of superconducting accelerator magnets built from Nb3Sn coils. This paper presents the results of the magnetic measurements performed on the prototype and series magnets with emphasis on field quality and field repeatability. The stability of the integral gradient is analyzed in view of the final installation in the machine.
  • L. Fiscarelli, E. Todesco, F. Mangiarotti, G. Deferne, M. Pentella, P. Rogacki, S. Russenschuck, S. Izquierdo Bermudez
    European Organization for Nuclear Research
Paper: WEPS64
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS64
About:  Received: 14 May 2024 — Revised: 21 May 2024 — Accepted: 21 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS65
The first superconducting final focus quadrupole prototype of the FCC-ee study
2851
A first FCC final focus quadrupole prototype has been designed, constructed and tested. The prototype is of a Canted Cosine Theta type using a NbTi conductor with novel features like edge compensation and wax impregnated. It has an aperture of 40 mm and a field gradient of 100 T/m. In this paper we recall the main design features and report on the test results on field quality and the powering campaign.
  • A. Thabuis, M. Koratzinos, G. Kirby, M. Liebsch, C. Petrone
    European Organization for Nuclear Research
Paper: WEPS65
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS65
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 19 May 2024 — Accepted: 19 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote
WEPS67
Status of coil-dominated discrete-cosine-theta quadrupole prototype for high rigidity isotope beams
2854
Iron-dominated superconducting magnets are one of the most popular and used design choices for superconducting magnetic quadrupoles for accelerator systems. While the iron yoke and pole tips are economic and effective in shaping the field, the large amount of iron also leads to certain drawbacks, namely, unwanted harmonics from the sextupole correctors nested inside of quadrupole iron pole tips. Additional problems include the nonlinear field profile present in the high-field regime caused by the presence of steel, the cryogenic design challenges of the iron yoke being part of the cold mass, and the mechanical challenges of mounting the sextupole and octupole, which will generate significant forces for apertures of the size being proposed. The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams is developing a coil dominated quadrupole as a future upgrade, and the presented work discusses the advantages of using an iron-free quadrupole, along with the methods and choices of the design and the current status of prototype fabrication. The methods and work presented will include the model results and the aspects of the model that have been verified up to the current status of prototype fabrication.
  • D. Greene, T. Xu, Y. Choi
    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
  • D. Zhang, P. Ostroumov, R. Koschay, X. Du, Y. Al-Mahmoud
    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, Michigan State University
  • J. Wenstrom
    Michigan State University
Paper: WEPS67
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS67
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 22 May 2024 — Accepted: 23 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote
WEPS68
Development and test of a large-aperture Nb3Sn cos-theta dipole coil with stress management
2858
The stress-managed cos-theta (SMCT) coil is a new concept which was proposed and is being developed at Fermilab in the framework of US Magnet Development Program (US-MDP) for high-field and/or large-aperture accelerator magnets based on low-temperature and high-temperature superconductors. A 120-mm aperture two-layer Nb3Sn SMCT dipole coil has been developed at Fermilab to demonstrate and test the SMCT concept including coil design, fabrication technology and performance. The first SMCT demo coil was fabricated and assembled with 60-mm aperture Nb3Sn coil inside a dipole mirror configuration and tested separately and in series with the insert coil. This paper summarizes the design, parameters, and quench performance of the 120-mm aperture SMCT coil in a dipole mirror configuration.
  • A. Zlobin, E. Barzi, I. Novitski, M. Baldini, D. Turrioni
    Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
Paper: WEPS68
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS68
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 20 May 2024 — Accepted: 23 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS71
Superconducting magnets for SIS100 and Super-FRS at FAIR – overview and progress
2862
At the FAIR project in Darmstadt, Germany, superconducting magnets will be utilized for the main accelerator, the SIS100 heavy ion synchrotron, and for the fragment separator Super-FRS. For SIS100, the magnets are fast ramped with a rate of up to 4 T/s while large apertures are required for Super-FRS. In total, several hundred magnets need to be produced, qualified and characterized for the operation at FAIR. For both machines, series production is ongoing and testing programs at operational conditions have been established for quality assurance of the high demanding magnet modules. In the presentation, an overview is given on the design and operation principles of the various magnet types and module combinations. The complex project landscape involving several sites for production, module integration, and cold testing is pictured. The project progress and key testing results are highlighted and an outlook for the installation and commissioning plans at FAIR is given.
  • C. Roux, A. Bleile, A. Waldt, A. Szwangruber, E. Cho, F. Kaether, H. Simon, H. Mueller, J. Meier, J. Ketter, K. Sugita, M. Winkler, M. Janke, N. Pyka, P. Aguar Bartolome, P. Kosek, P. Spiller, P. Szwangruber, T. Winkler, V. Velonas, W. Freisleben
    GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH
Paper: WEPS71
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS71
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 19 May 2024 — Accepted: 19 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS72
Thermal studies of the magnet quenches of the SuperKEKB beam final focus system
2866
The beam final focus system of SuperKEKB consists of 55 superconducting magnets. They are 8 main quadrupole magnets, 43 corrector magnets and 4 compensation solenoids. During beam operation from 2018 to 2022, the superconducting magnets quenched 40 times induced by the electron or positron beam hitting the superconducting coils or the other disturbances. The temperatures of the quenched superconducting coils are being studied with the accumulated magnet quench data and the conditions of beam operation. The temperatures of the coils are evaluated with the critical temperature defined by the operation magnetic field and the transport current. The authors will report the temperature range of the superconducting coil shortly after the coil quench.
  • N. Ohuchi, Y. Arimoto
    High Energy Accelerator Research Organization
Paper: WEPS72
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS72
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 18 May 2024 — Accepted: 18 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS73
Time decay effect of the superconducting final focus quadrupole fields on SuperKEKB beam operation
2868
SuperKEKB is the particle collider of electrons at 7 GeV and positrons at 4 GeV, and it is the cutting-edge collider in the luminosity frontier using the “Nano-beam scheme”. The beam colliding operation of SuperKEKB started from 2018 May, and the peak luminosity reached at 4.678×1e-34 1/cm² 1/s with quite expert beam operation. In beam operation, the vertical tune of the positron beam was measured to decline exponentially with time just after exciting the final focus quadrupole magnets. To identify the source of the tune change, we performed the magnetic field measurements of the prototype final focus quadrupole magnets, and the exponential field change with time after exciting the magnets was measured and the measured field decay rates were found to be of equal size of the measured tune change during beam operation. Because the field change is due to the magnetization decay in the superconductor, NbTi, filament, we modified the excitation pattern of the magnets and canceled the field decay. We will report the measured beam tune changes, the prototype field measurement results and the condition of beam operation with the modified excitation patterns of the quadrupole magnets.
  • N. Ohuchi, Y. Arimoto, T. Oki, H. Koiso, Y. Ohnishi, A. Morita, H. Sugimoto, M. Masuzawa
    High Energy Accelerator Research Organization
Paper: WEPS73
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS73
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 20 May 2024 — Accepted: 21 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS74
SuperKEKB IR upgrade idea with Nb₃Sn quadrupole magnets
2872
The SuperKEKB IR is designed to achieve extremely small vertical and horizontal beta functions at the IP. Superconducting magnets provide the focusing magnetic field required to squeeze down the beta functions. The Belle II detector solenoid field is fully compensated with the superconducting anti-solenoids on each side of the IP. For further luminosity improvement, an upgrade of the superconducting final focus quadrupole magnets is required; a new canceling scheme for the Belle-II solenoid field, based on new anti-solenoids, is to be implemented. The design concept of the new IR is to make the beam trajectory as parallel to the QC1 magnet axis as possible to cancel the X-Y coupling and chromaticity between the IP and QC1s and minimize vertical emittance by redesigning the anti-solenoid profile. Moving QC1P closer to the IP results in an increase in the required field strength and current density. Nb3Sn is selected as the cable material instead of the present NbTi. While superconducting properties are better, Nb3Sn magnet fabrication is quite difficult because of the brittleness of the material. New IR design idea and the technical challenges of the new IR magnets are described.
  • M. Masuzawa, A. Morita, H. Koiso, K. Aoki, M. Tobiyama, N. Ohuchi, Y. Arimoto
    High Energy Accelerator Research Organization
Paper: WEPS74
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS74
About:  Received: 13 May 2024 — Revised: 18 May 2024 — Accepted: 19 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS75
A design for very short powered quadrupoles
2875
Powered optics magnets which could be stacked in a very dense alternating pattern could enable a higher density of focusing in beamlines, with potential use for e.g. muon beams or high-current hadron beams at low energy. Here, we investigate such a design of quadrupole, where the yoke is energised by straight conductors running parallel to the beam, and does not require conductor to pass within the gap between yokes of adjacent magnets of opposite polarity. Suitable shaping and design of the steel yokes allows alternating focusing and defocusing quadrupoles, of arbitrary thickness, to be positioned with only the spacing required for constraining fringe fields. We investigate multiple thicknesses/sizes, and the use of thin field clamps to further reduce the required spacing between quadrupoles.
  • A. Herrod
    Ion Beam Applications SA
  • R. Herrod
    Tri-Space Laboratory
Paper: WEPS75
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS75
About:  Received: 13 May 2024 — Revised: 22 May 2024 — Accepted: 22 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS76
Upgrading of the INFN-LNF magnetic measurements laboratory
2879
The magnetic measurements laboratory of the Frascati National Laboratories of INFN is one of the pole of the Innovative Research Infrastructure for applied Superconductivity (IRIS). This infrastructure aims at upgrading laboratories to carry out basic research on magnetism and superconducting materials, test of superconducting magnets, wires, tapes, cables. The LNF pole will be devoted to testing SC coils and magnets at room temperature. These measurements are recommended during the manufacturing phase, since they allow the validation of the assembly and the detection of defects at early stages of production, before the cryogenic tests are carried out. Part of the equipment is already available, including a stretched wire bench, a rotating coil system, a NMR probe, gaussmeters, instruments for high precision electrical measurements. The IRIS upgrade will include a 3D Hall probe mole system, a pulsed wire bench, a 5-axes coordinatometer, high-stability power supplies of various sizes, a calibration system. The flexibility of the instruments will allow to cover a large range of magnetic measurements, from point maps to integrated fields, from multipolar analysis to fiducialization.
  • L. Sabbatini, M. Del Franco, A. Selce, A. Vannozzi
    Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
Paper: WEPS76
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS76
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 20 May 2024 — Accepted: 20 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS77
Overview of the superconducting accelerator magnet system developments at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
A key strategic approach to making accelerator-driven light sources more energy-efficient and sustainable is to employ superconductivity. At Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) there is a successful experience in developing and enhancing superconducting magnet systems for accelerators. That includes the design and fabrication of low and high-temperature superconducting technologies, high-field undulators with long/short periodic lengths as well as novel miniature high-strength magnets. This contribution gives an overview of the previous achievements and ongoing projects at KIT related to superconducting undulators and magnets.
  • A. Bernhard, A. Grau, A. Mueller, B. Krasch, D. Saez de Jauregui, E. Bruendermann, F. Abusaif, J. Gethmann, S. Fatehi
    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
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WEPS79
Optimization studies on accelerator sample components for energy management purposes
2887
The large amount of energy required to operate large-scale facilities with particle accelerators within has been considered as one of the important research topics over the past years. This sheds light on the importance of the research field of energy management that entitles, with a view to long-term operations, the implementation of smart and sustainable technologies. One of the key technologies in accelerators are superconductor (SC)-based designs. The vanishing electrical resistance together with the ability to provide field values well above those from conventional conductors is the main motivation behind exploiting superconducting wires in building coils and magnets for large-scale accelerators. However, these superconductors can also quench under certain conditions, driving the wires into the normal state and potentially allowing for overheating and destruction of the conductor material and/or the whole design. This work will present the results of optimization-based analyses performed on accelerator SC-sample components aiming at goal designs that are more energy efficient at a reference operational field or current. A compromise between getting the best performance for excellent science from a design (with superconductivity preserved and safe operation maintained) and reducing its power consumption (and eventually its effective cost) will be addressed too.
  • F. Abusaif, A. Grau, A. Mueller, B. Krasch, D. Saez de Jauregui, E. Bruendermann, G. De Carne
    Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Paper: WEPS79
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS79
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 16 May 2024 — Accepted: 16 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS80
Lessons learned from hardware failure during HL-LHC AUP cabling
2891
The cabling facility at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has experienced a heavy increase in workload during the US-HiLumi Accelerator Upgrade Project (AUP). Several critical components have experienced unexpected failure over the project’s lifetime for reasons at least partly attributable due to increased wear and tear on the hardware subsystems. This work presents three case studies of varying severity and lessons learned from each failure. Suggested strategies to ensure operational readiness and uptime for legacy systems are also discussed.
  • E. Lee, A. Lin, C. Perez, E. Buron, I. Pong, J. Croteau, M. Naus, T. Lipton
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • A. Baskys
    European Organization for Nuclear Research
Paper: WEPS80
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS80
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 23 May 2024 — Accepted: 23 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS81
Optimizing the magnetic circuit of HTSU through REBCO tape selection
2895
The National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center (NSRRC) has conducted a study on the magnetic circuit design of a high-temperature superconducting undulator (HTSU). This study explores the potential use of second-generation high-temperature superconducting (2G-HTS) materials in undulator magnet, which offer advantages such as higher current density and operating temperature. To evaluate the feasibility of HTSU design, a preliminary magnetic circuit analysis has been conducted. The simulation of the HTSU involved the use of several commercial 2G-HTS tapes with different widths. Insulating and non-insulating HTS tapes were compared to evaluate their effects on current density and magnetic field. Additionally, the maximum field strength on the surface of the tape was determined to establish the optimal operating temperature and current density for the HTSU. These simulation results provide valuable insights for optimizing the design and performance of the HTSU, ultimately contributing to advancements in particle accelerator technologies.
  • J. Jan, F. Lin, Y. Chu, J. Huang, C. Yang
    National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center
Paper: WEPS81
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS81
About:  Received: 09 May 2024 — Revised: 17 May 2024 — Accepted: 17 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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WEPS82
Single unified model of a CCT dipole using 3DEXPERIENCE platform
2900
The concept of a single unified model for designing accelerator magnets has long been sought. Any meaningful virtual twin model must embody the ability to simulate the electromagnetic, thermal and structural performance of the device, as well as retaining the full geometric, materials and manufacturing information. Not only this, but the virtual twin must be able to respond to a design change and identify that either some of the simulations need to be repeated to capture the effect of the design change or to reliably identify that the last simulation results available were from a previous virtual prototype. As the fields of interest in these magnets are particularly sensitive to small geometric perturbations, accurate simulation capabilities are required to capture both electromagnetic and mechanical effects. Finally, the ability to optimize the design accounting for input from multiple areas of physics is paramount. In this paper, the authors report how the Dassault Systemes 3DEXPERIENCE Platform has been used to create a robust and efficient virtual twin model of a canted cosine theta dipole structure, leveraging the electromagnetic simulation tools CST Studio Suite® and Opera®, the structural solvers available on the 3DEXPERIENCE Platform, and the embedded optimization functionalities. All of the physics simulation and optimization processes share a single parametrized CAD geometry, which provides the flexibility for model design variation and rapid prototyping.
  • B. Pine
    SIMULIA Opera
  • D. Ilea
    Dassault Systemes
Paper: WEPS82
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPS82
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 19 May 2024 — Accepted: 21 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
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THYN1
First results of AUP Nb3Sn quadrupole horizontal tests
2943
The Large Hadron Collider will soon undergo an upgrade to increase its luminosity by a factor of ~10. A crucial part of this upgrade will be replacement of the NbTi final focus magnets with Nb3Sn magnets that achieve a ~50% increase in the field strength. This will be the first ever large scale implementation of Nb3Sn magnets in a particle accelerator. This talk will present the program to fabricate these components and first results from horizontal tests of fully assembled cryoassemblies.
  • M. Baldini, A. Nobrega, A. Vouris, C. Narug, D. Turrioni, G. Ambrosio, G. Apollinari, G. Chlachidze, J. Blowers, J. DiMarco, M. Yu, R. Bossert, R. Carcagno, S. Feher, S. Krave, S. Stoynev, T. Nicol, T. Page, T. Strauss, V. Lombardo, V. Marinozzi, V. Nikolic
    Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
  • A. Baskys, G. Vallone
    European Organization for Nuclear Research
  • A. Lin, D. Cheng, E. Lee, G. Sabbi, H. Pan, I. Pong, J. Croteau, K. Ray, L. Martin, L. Garcia Fajardo, M. Marchevsky, M. Naus, P. Ferracin, S. Prestemon, X. Wang
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • A. Ben Yahia, H. Hocker, H. Song, J. Schmalzle, J. Muratore, M. Anerella, P. Wanderer, P. Joshi
    Brookhaven National Laboratory
  • C. Orozco
    University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
  • C. Sanabria
    Commonwealth Fusion Systems
  • K. Amm
    GE Global Research
  • M. Turenne
    Muons, Inc
Slides: THYN1
Paper: THYN1
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-THYN1
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 21 May 2024 — Accepted: 21 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote
THBN1
Progress in the design of the magnets for a Muon Collider
2956
Magnets have been identified as one of the critical technologies for a proton-driven Muon Collider. Within the scope of the International Muon Collider Collaboration we have progressed in the review of requirements, and the development of concepts towards the initial engineering of several of the most critical magnets identified from our previous work. In this paper we present an update of the accelerator magnet configuration for all the parts of the Muon Collider complex, from muon production to collision. We then give details on the specific technologies that have been selected as baseline. Overall, it is clear that a Muon Collider requires very significant innovation in accelerator magnet technology, mostly relying on the success of HTS magnet development. We include in our description a list of options and development staging steps intended to mitigate technical, cost and schedule risk.
  • S. Fabbri
    CERN
  • B. Caiffi
    Istituto Nazionale Fisica Nucleare
  • F. Boattini, L. Bottura
    European Organization for Nuclear Research
  • L. Quettier
    Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique
  • M. Statera, S. Mariotto
    Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare
Slides: THBN1
Paper: THBN1
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-THBN1
About:  Received: 15 May 2024 — Revised: 22 May 2024 — Accepted: 22 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote