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An MgB- Superconducting Shield Prototype for the Future Circular Collider Septum Magnet

A passive superconducting shield was previously proposed to realize a high-field (above 3 T) septum magnet for the Future Circular Collider proton–proton ring (FCC-hh). This paper presents the experimental results of a potential shield material, MgB$_2$, at a temperature of 4.2 K. A cylindrical shie...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Barna, Daniel, Giunchi, Giovanni, Novák, Martin, Brunner, Kristof, Német, Aniko, Petrone, Carlo, Atanasov, Miroslav, Bajas, Hugues, Feuvrier, Jerome
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TASC.2019.2920359
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2701592
Descripción
Sumario:A passive superconducting shield was previously proposed to realize a high-field (above 3 T) septum magnet for the Future Circular Collider proton–proton ring (FCC-hh). This paper presents the experimental results of a potential shield material, MgB$_2$, at a temperature of 4.2 K. A cylindrical shield with a wall thickness of 8.3 mm was manufactured by the reactive liquid magnesium infiltration technique using extra large grain ($\sim$160 $\mu$m) boron precursor, and tested in a transverse magnetic field. The shield was stable against flux jumps on the virgin curve, but suffered from flux jumps at low-field levels after high-field exposure. The tube could shield a magnetic field of 2.75 T on its surface before field penetration to its interior. Parameters of the critical current density of the material could be estimated from simulations, which indicate a steeper $J_c(B)$curve than observed previously for large grain ($\sim$100 $\mu$m) MgB$_2$, and predict a slightly better shielding performance (3 T) with an ideal geometry. Relaxation of the shielding currents is at an acceptable level. We estimate that a self-supporting shield of a wall thickness of 14 mm could be adequate for the construction of a 3-T septum magnet, if the flux jump problem can be solved. This thickness would correspond to a total septum thickness (including beam pipes, etc.) of around 22 mm, which is an acceptable figure for the FCC-hh.