39 research outputs found

    Energy Extraction Resistors for the Main Dipole and Quadrupole Circuits of the LHC

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    When the LHC will be operating at its maximum beam energy, its superconducting dipole chains store a total magnetic energy of more than 11 GJ. At the same time, the QF and QD quadrupole circuits store a total energy of 400 MJ. Even with the sectorisation of each of the three principal power circuits into eight individually powered segments, the stored energy of a single circuit is considerable. During normal operation the energy in the dipole circuits is safely returned to the mains grid, using the thyristor-based, 'booster' unit of the power converters, operating in inversion. For the quadrupole chains, where the converter is of a mono-polar topology, the stored energy is dissipated into the resistive part of the warm d.c. power lines (busbars and cables) in a slow, controlled run-down. When a magnet quenches, however, such a slow energy transfer, taking 20 minutes from the rated LHC current, will not be possible. The 'cold' diode, taking over the magnet current in case of a quench, will not survive this slow current decay. For this reason, energy extraction facilities will be inserted into the power circuits. These systems are being designed to absorb the total circuit energy and de-excite the chains with a current decay time constant of 104 s for the dipoles and 40 s for the quadrupoles. The resulting maximum decay rates (-125 A/s and -325 A/s respectively) are comfortably below the levels where quench-back will occur. The energy extraction systems are based on an array of special, mechanical d.c. circuit breakers and absorber resistors, which are switched into the circuit by opening of the breakers. The design and construction of these large power resistors of a unique concept are the topics of this paper. The project is being realised as collaboration between, IHEP-Protvino, CERN and European Industry

    Energy Extraction in the CERN Large Hadron Collider: a Project Overview

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    In case of a resistive transition (quench), fast and reliable extraction of the magnetic energy, stored in the superconducting coils of the electromagnets of a particle collider, represents an important part of its magnet protection system. In general, the quench detectors, the quench heaters and the cold by-pass diodes across each magnet, together with the energy extraction facilities provide the required protection of the quenching superconductors against damage due to local energy dissipation. In CERN's LHC machine the energy stored in each of its eight superconducting dipole chains exceeds 1300 MJ. Following an opening of the extraction switches this energy will be absorbed in large extraction resistors located in the underground collider tunnel or adjacent galleries, during the exponential current decay. Also the sixteen, 13 kA quadrupole chains (QF, QD) and more than one hundred and fifty, 600 A circuits of the corrector magnets will be equipped with extraction systems. The extraction switch-gear is based on specially designed, mechanical high-speed DC breakers, in certain cases combined with capacitive snubber circuits for arc suppression. This paper is an overview of the complete project with emphasis on the arguments and motivation for the choice of equipment and methods. It presents the basic properties of the principal components, the operational aspects and the present state of advancement. Finally, it highlights the implications of the extraction process on other systems of the LHC collider

    Design, Production and First Commissioning Results of the Electrical Feedboxes of the LHC

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    A total of 44 CERN designed cryogenic electrical feedboxes are needed to power the LHC superconducting magnets. The feedboxes include more than 1000 superconducting circuits fed by high temperature superconductor and conventional current leads ranging from 120 A to 13 kA. In addition to providing the electrical current to the superconducting circuits, they also ensure specific mechanical and cryogenic functions for the LHC. The paper focuses on the main design aspects and related production operations and gives an overview of specific technologies employed. Results of the commissioning of the feedboxes of the first LHC sectors are presented

    PENGARUH PENAMBAHAN CACAHAN LIMBAH PLASTIK JENIS HIGH DENSITY POLYETHYLENE (HDPE) PADA

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    Waste is a very complex problem in urban area. Plastic waste is increasing every year. Kupang with population of 291,794 people generate waste reaches 926 m3/day. Organic waste to 700 m3 and inorganic waste about 226 m3. Concrete is planned by strength quality 25 MPa. Based on the analysis in this study obtained that concrete flexural strength value increased due to the addition of HDPE plastic shredded into the concrete, with chopped levels are added to the concrete at 0%, 0.50% and 0.90% .0,70%. Flexural strength value of normal concrete without the addition of shredded plastic (0%) is 4.12 MPa, flexural strength of concrete with the addition of shredded plastic 0.50% is 4.30 MPa increased 4.37% from normal concrete flexural strength, flexural strength of concrete with the addition of shredded plastics 0.70% is 4.21 MPa increased 2.19% from the normal concrete flexural strength and flexural strength of concrete with the addition of shredded plastic 0.90% is 3.94 MPa decreased 3.64% of flexural strength normal concrete

    First Observation of Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission in a Free-Electron Laser at 109 nm Wavelength

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    We present the first observation of Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission (SASE) in a free-electron laser (FEL) in the Vacuum Ultraviolet regime at 109 nm wavelength (11 eV). The observed free-electron laser gain (approx. 3000) and the radiation characteristics, such as dependency on bunch charge, angular distribution, spectral width and intensity fluctuations all corroborate the existing models for SASE FELs.Comment: 6 pages including 6 figures; e-mail: [email protected]

    The effects of culture, attitudes and perceptions on industrial cluster policy – the case of Russia

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    Culture, attitudes and perceptions have an underappreciated effect on industrial cluster policies particularly in transition economies, where long-established local social norms are confronted with hard-pressed external imperatives. This paper examines the impact of cultural and governmental peculiarities in the Russian context on the development of Special Economic Zones and Industrial Parks. Based on some stylised facts about the Russian context, in-depth interviews and surveys of the managing companies and tenants of all industrial clusters in Russia, we find cultural and governmental characteristics emerge as major influences on the effective development of industrial cluster policies. We develop an adapted industrial cluster model that accommodates these factors and suggests a policy pathway for mitigation

    Distance learning courses: adjusting to conditions in Russia and NIS countries

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