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First Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam Impact

The energy stored in the particle beams of an accelerator such as CERNs LHC is substantial and requires a complex machine protection system to protect the equipment from damage. Despite efficient beam absorbers, several failure modes can lead to beam impact on superconducting magnets. The energy dep...

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Autores principales: Raginel, Vivien, Bonura, Marco, Kleiven, David, Kulesz, Karolina, Mentink, Matthias, Senatore, Carmine, Schmidt, Rudiger, Siemko, Andrzej, Verweij, Arjan, Will, Andreas, Wollmann, Daniel
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2018.2817346
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2674336
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author Raginel, Vivien
Bonura, Marco
Kleiven, David
Kulesz, Karolina
Mentink, Matthias
Senatore, Carmine
Schmidt, Rudiger
Siemko, Andrzej
Verweij, Arjan
Will, Andreas
Wollmann, Daniel
author_facet Raginel, Vivien
Bonura, Marco
Kleiven, David
Kulesz, Karolina
Mentink, Matthias
Senatore, Carmine
Schmidt, Rudiger
Siemko, Andrzej
Verweij, Arjan
Will, Andreas
Wollmann, Daniel
author_sort Raginel, Vivien
collection CERN
description The energy stored in the particle beams of an accelerator such as CERNs LHC is substantial and requires a complex machine protection system to protect the equipment from damage. Despite efficient beam absorbers, several failure modes can lead to beam impact on superconducting magnets. The energy deposition from these beam losses can cause significant temperature rise and mechanical stress in the magnet coils, which can lead to a degradation of the insulation strength and critical current of the superconducting cables. An improved understanding of the damage mechanisms is important for the LHC when considering its planned increase in beam brightness, as well as for other accelerators using superconducting magnets. The degradation mechanisms of Nb-Ti and Nb $_3$Sn strands and the cable stacks insulation have been assessed based on magnetization and breakdown voltage measurements in three experiments at room temperature. The degradation of the insulation when exposed to high temperatures for several hours was measured. The second experiment assessed the effect of a millisecond temperature rise on superconducting strands using a fast capacitor discharge. In the third experiment, cable stacks and single strands have been exposed to a 440 GeV proton beam. In this paper, the experimental results of these tests are presented and discussed.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1669777
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2018
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spelling oai-inspirehep.net-16697772020-12-14T14:00:41Zdoi:10.1109/TASC.2018.2817346http://cds.cern.ch/record/2674336engRaginel, VivienBonura, MarcoKleiven, DavidKulesz, KarolinaMentink, MatthiasSenatore, CarmineSchmidt, RudigerSiemko, AndrzejVerweij, ArjanWill, AndreasWollmann, DanielFirst Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam ImpactAccelerators and Storage RingsThe energy stored in the particle beams of an accelerator such as CERNs LHC is substantial and requires a complex machine protection system to protect the equipment from damage. Despite efficient beam absorbers, several failure modes can lead to beam impact on superconducting magnets. The energy deposition from these beam losses can cause significant temperature rise and mechanical stress in the magnet coils, which can lead to a degradation of the insulation strength and critical current of the superconducting cables. An improved understanding of the damage mechanisms is important for the LHC when considering its planned increase in beam brightness, as well as for other accelerators using superconducting magnets. The degradation mechanisms of Nb-Ti and Nb $_3$Sn strands and the cable stacks insulation have been assessed based on magnetization and breakdown voltage measurements in three experiments at room temperature. The degradation of the insulation when exposed to high temperatures for several hours was measured. The second experiment assessed the effect of a millisecond temperature rise on superconducting strands using a fast capacitor discharge. In the third experiment, cable stacks and single strands have been exposed to a 440 GeV proton beam. In this paper, the experimental results of these tests are presented and discussed.oai:inspirehep.net:16697772018
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Raginel, Vivien
Bonura, Marco
Kleiven, David
Kulesz, Karolina
Mentink, Matthias
Senatore, Carmine
Schmidt, Rudiger
Siemko, Andrzej
Verweij, Arjan
Will, Andreas
Wollmann, Daniel
First Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam Impact
title First Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam Impact
title_full First Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam Impact
title_fullStr First Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam Impact
title_full_unstemmed First Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam Impact
title_short First Experimental Results on Damage Limits of Superconducting Accelerator Magnet Components Due to Instantaneous Beam Impact
title_sort first experimental results on damage limits of superconducting accelerator magnet components due to instantaneous beam impact
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2018.2817346
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2674336
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