212 research outputs found
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Mechanical design of a high field common coil magnet
A common coil design for high field 2-in-1 accelerator magnets has been previously presented as a "conductor-friendly" option for high field magnets applicable for a Very Large Hadron Collider. This paper presents the mechanical design for a 14 tesla 2-in-1 dipole based on the common coil design approach. The magnet will use a high current density Nb/sub 3/Sn conductor. The design addresses mechanical issues particular to the common coil geometry: horizontal support against coil edges, vertical preload on coil faces, end loading and support, and coil stresses and strains. The magnet is the second in a series of racetrack coil magnets that will provide experimental verification of the common coil design approach. (9 refs)
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Critical Current of Superconducting Rutherford Cable in High Magnetic Fields with Transverse Pressure
For high energy physics applications superconducting cables are subjected to large stresses and high magnetic fields during service. It is essential to know how these cables perform in these operating conditions. A loading fixture capable of applying loads of up to 700 kN has been developed by NHMFL for LBNL. This fixture permits uniform loading of straight cables over a 122 mm length in a split-pair solenoid in fields up to 12 T at 4.2 K. The first results from this system for Rutherford cables of internal-tin and modified jelly roll strand of Nb{sub 3}Sn produced by IGC and TWC showed that little permanent degradation occurs up to 210 MPa. However, the cable made from internal-tin strand showed a 40% reduction in K{sub c} at 11T and 210 MPa while a dable made from modified jelly roll material showed only a 15% reduction in I{sub c} at 11T and 185 MPa
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Transport and Magnetization Properties of rolled RRP Nb3Sn Strands.
Restack Rod Process (RRP) strands with 54 and 108 sub-elements were rolled from 0.7 mm diameter to 0.45 mm thickness to simulate the deformation of strands at the edges of Rutherford cables. Various diagnoses were then applied to assess performance and stability. Transport measurements were used to assess the effect of rolling on the critical current. Magnetization measurements were used to probe superconducting pathway bridging between deformed sub-elements. The copper residual resistivity ratio RRR was also measured to assess tin contamination due to thinned or ruptured diffusion barriers. While systematic changes were observed in all three measurements with increasing deformation, RRR showed the strongest changes. The implications of these measurements for cable stability, and their relationship to observations of the strand cross-section by light microscopy, are discussed
The upper critical field of filamentary Nb3Sn conductors
We have examined the upper critical field of a large and representative set
of present multi-filamentary Nb3Sn wires and one bulk sample over a temperature
range from 1.4 K up to the zero field critical temperature. Since all present
wires use a solid-state diffusion reaction to form the A15 layers,
inhomogeneities with respect to Sn content are inevitable, in contrast to some
previously studied homogeneous samples. Our study emphasizes the effects that
these inevitable inhomogeneities have on the field-temperature phase boundary.
The property inhomogeneities are extracted from field-dependent resistive
transitions which we find broaden with increasing inhomogeneity. The upper
90-99 % of the transitions clearly separates alloyed and binary wires but a
pure, Cu-free binary bulk sample also exhibits a zero temperature critical
field that is comparable to the ternary wires. The highest mu0Hc2 detected in
the ternary wires are remarkably constant: The highest zero temperature upper
critical fields and zero field critical temperatures fall within 29.5 +/- 0.3 T
and 17.8 +/- 0.3 K respectively, independent of the wire layout. The complete
field-temperature phase boundary can be described very well with the relatively
simple Maki-DeGennes model using a two parameter fit, independent of
composition, strain state, sample layout or applied critical state criterion.Comment: Accepted Journal of Applied Physics Few changes to shorten document,
replaced eq. 7-
Simulations of the effects of tin composition gradients on the superconducting properties of Nb3Sn conductors
In powder-in-tube (PIT) Nb3Sn composites, the A15 phase forms between a
central tin-rich core and a coaxial Nb tube, thus causing the tin content and
superconducting properties to vary with radius across the A15 layer. Since this
geometry is also ideal for magnetic characterization of the superconducting
properties with the field parallel to the tube axis, a system of concentric
shells with varying tin content was used to simulate the superconducting
properties, the overall severity of the Sn composition gradient being defined
by an index N. Using well-known scaling relationships and property trends
developed in an earlier experimental study, the critical current density for
each shell was calculated, and from this the magnetic moment of each shell was
found. By summing these moments, experimentally measured properties such as
pinning-force curves and Kramer plots could be simulated. We found that
different tin profiles have only a minor effect on the shape of Kramer plots,
but a pronounced effect on the irreversibility fields defined by the
extrapolation of Kramer plots. In fact, these extrapolated values H_K are very
close to a weighted average of the superconducting properties across the layer
for all N. The difference between H_K and the upper critical field commonly
seen in experiments is a direct consequence of the different ways measurements
probe the simulated Sn gradients. Sn gradients were found to be significantly
deleterious to the critical current density Jc, since reductions to both the
elementary pinning force and the flux pinning scaling field H_K compound the
reduction in Jc. The simulations show that significant gains in Jc of Nb3Sn
strands might be realized by circumventing strong compositional gradients of
tin.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables, submitted to J. Appl. Phy
Canted-cosine-theta magnet (CCT)-A concept for high field accelerator magnets
Canted-Cosine-Theta (CCT) magnet is an accelerator magnet that superposes fields of nested and tilted solenoids that are oppositely canted. The current distribution of any canted layer generates a pure harmonic field as well as a solenoid field that can be cancelled with a similar but oppositely canted layer. The concept places windings within mandrel's ribs and spars that simultaneously intercept and guide Lorentz forces of each turn to prevent stress accumulation. With respect to other designs, the need for pre-stress in this concept is reduced by an order of magnitude making it highly compatible with the use of strain sensitive superconductors such as Nb3Sn or HTS. Intercepting large Lorentz forces is of particular interest in magnets with large bores and high field accelerator magnets like the one foreseen in the future high energy upgrade of the LHC. This paper describes the CCT concept and reports on the construction of CCT1 a "proof of principle" dipole
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Second-Generation Coil Design of the Nb3Sn low-β Quadrupole for the High Luminosity LHC
As part of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Luminosity upgrade program, the U.S.-LHC Accelerator Research Program collaboration and CERN are working together to design and build a 150-mm aperture Nb3Sn quadrupole for the LHC interaction regions. A first series of 1.5-m-long coils was fabricated and assembled in a first short model. A detailed visual inspection of the coils was carried out to investigate cable dimensional changes during heat treatment and the position of the windings in the coil straight section and in the end region. The analyses allow identifying a set of design changes which, combined with a fine tune of the cable geometry and a field quality optimization, were implemented in a new second-generation coil design. In this paper, we review the main characteristics of the first generation coils, describe the modification in coil layout and discuss their impact on parts design and magnet analysis
Insertion Magnets
Chapter 3 in High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) : Preliminary
Design Report. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is one of the largest scientific
instruments ever built. Since opening up a new energy frontier for exploration
in 2010, it has gathered a global user community of about 7,000 scientists
working in fundamental particle physics and the physics of hadronic matter at
extreme temperature and density. To sustain and extend its discovery potential,
the LHC will need a major upgrade in the 2020s. This will increase its
luminosity (rate of collisions) by a factor of five beyond the original design
value and the integrated luminosity (total collisions created) by a factor ten.
The LHC is already a highly complex and exquisitely optimised machine so this
upgrade must be carefully conceived and will require about ten years to
implement. The new configuration, known as High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC), will
rely on a number of key innovations that push accelerator technology beyond its
present limits. Among these are cutting-edge 11-12 tesla superconducting
magnets, compact superconducting cavities for beam rotation with ultra-precise
phase control, new technology and physical processes for beam collimation and
300 metre-long high-power superconducting links with negligible energy
dissipation. The present document describes the technologies and components
that will be used to realise the project and is intended to serve as the basis
for the detailed engineering design of HL-LHC.Comment: 19 pages, Chapter 3 in High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC)
: Preliminary Design Repor
A superconducting transformer system for high current cable testing
This article describes the development of a direct-current (dc) superconducting transformer system for the high current test of superconducting cables. The transformer consists of a core-free 10 464 turn primary solenoid which is enclosed by a 6.5 turn secondary. The transformer is designed to deliver a 50 kA dc secondary current at a dc primary current of about 50 A. The secondary current is measured inductively using two toroidal-wound Rogowski coils. The Rogowski coil signal is digitally integrated, resulting in a voltage signal that is proportional to the secondary current. This voltage signal is used to control the secondary current using a feedback loop which automatically compensates for resistive losses in the splices to the superconducting cable samples that are connected to the secondary. The system has been commissioned up to 28 kA secondary current. The reproducibility in the secondary current measurement is better than 0.05% for the relevant current range up to 25 kA. The drift in the secondary current, which results from drift in the digital integrator, is estimated to be below 0.5 A/min. The system's performance is further demonstrated through a voltage-current measurement on a superconducting cable sample at 11 T background magnetic field. The superconducting transformer system enables fast, high resolution, economic, and safe tests of the critical current of superconducting cable samples
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Nb3Sn Quadrupole Magnets for the LHC IR
The development of insertion quadrupoles with 205 T/m gradient and 90 mm bore represents a promising strategy to achieve the ultimate luminosity goal of 2.5 x 10{sup 34} cm{sup -2}s{sup -1} at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). At present, Nb{sub 3}Sn is the only practical conductor which can meet these requirements. Since Nb{sub 3}Sn is brittle, and considerably more strain sensitive than NbTi, the design concepts and fabrication techniques developed for NbTi magnets need to be modified appropriately. In addition, IR magnets must provide high field quality and operate reliably under severe radiation loads. The results of conceptual design studies addressing these issues are presented
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