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Resistance of Splices in the LHC Main Superconducting Magnet Circuits at 1.9 K

The electrical interconnections between the LHC main magnets are made of soldered joints (splices) of two superconducting Rutherford cables, stabilized by a copper busbar. In 2009, a number of splices was found not properly stabilized and could have suffered a thermal runaway in case of quench at hi...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Charifoulline, Zinour, Bednarek, Mateusz Jakub, Denz, Reiner, Le Naour, Sandrine, Scheuerlein, Christian, Siemko, Andrzej, Steckert, Jens, Tock, Jean-Philippe, Verweij, Arjan, Zerlauth, Markus
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2017.2784355
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2311683
Descripción
Sumario:The electrical interconnections between the LHC main magnets are made of soldered joints (splices) of two superconducting Rutherford cables, stabilized by a copper busbar. In 2009, a number of splices was found not properly stabilized and could have suffered a thermal runaway in case of quench at high current. The LHC was, therefore, operated at reduced energy and all joints were continuously monitored by a newly installed layer of the quench protection system. During the first long shutdown (LS1) in 2013/14, the high-current busbar joints were consolidated to allow us a safe operation of the LHC at its design energy, i.e., 14-TeV center-of-mass. The superconducting magnets and circuits consolidation project has coordinated the consolidation of the 10306 13-kA busbar splices. Since 2015, the LHC is successfully operated at an energy of 13-TeV center-of-mass. This paper will briefly describe the applied analysis method and will present the results and comparisons of the Rutherford-cable splice resistance measurements at 1.9 K before and after LS1, based on an unprecedented amount of information gathered during long-term operation of superconducting high-current joints. A few outliers that are still present after the splice consolidation will also be shortly discussed.