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Magneto-Thermal Stability in LARP Nb$_{3}$Sn TQS Magnets

In the framework of the US LHC Accelerator Program (LARP), three US laboratories BNL, FNAL and LBNL are developing Nb$_{3}$Sn quadrupole magnets for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) luminosity upgrade. At present CERN is supporting this activity by testing some of the LARP 1 m long 90 mm aperture mag...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Bordini, B, Bajko, M, Caspi, S, Dietderich, D, Felice, H, Ferracin, P, Rossi, L, Sabbi, G L, Takala, E
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2010.2040600
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1282395
Descripción
Sumario:In the framework of the US LHC Accelerator Program (LARP), three US laboratories BNL, FNAL and LBNL are developing Nb$_{3}$Sn quadrupole magnets for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) luminosity upgrade. At present CERN is supporting this activity by testing some of the LARP 1 m long 90 mm aperture magnets. Recently two magnets using a shell based key and bladder technology (TQS) have been tested at CERN. These magnets (TQS02c, TQS03a) share the same mechanical structure and use a 27 strand Rutherford cable based one on the 0.7 mm RRP® strand produced by Oxford Superconducting Technology (OST). The main difference between the two magnets is the strand sub-element layout (54/61 in TQS02c versus 108/127 in TQS03a) and the strand critical current. The TQS03a wire has a significantly lower critical current, a larger amount of copper stabilizer, and a larger number of superconducting sub-elements with respect to the TQS02c strand. The tests show that TQS02c was stable between 4.3 K and 2.7 K while it was limited by the self-field instability at lower temperatures. TQS03a was not limited by magneto-thermal instabilities and reached 93% of the short sample limit both at 4.3 K and 1.9 K. In this paper the results are summarized and compared with the stability measurements performed at CERN on individual strands.