1 / 24

GianLuca Sabbi LARP Collaboration Meeting 14 FNAL, April 26, 2010

BNL - FNAL - LBNL - SLAC. Magnet Systems Status and Plans in view of the Chamonix Workshop discussions and the LHC Luminosity Task Force recommendations. GianLuca Sabbi LARP Collaboration Meeting 14 FNAL, April 26, 2010. Outline. Magnet R&D Program components Recent technical progress

Télécharger la présentation

GianLuca Sabbi LARP Collaboration Meeting 14 FNAL, April 26, 2010

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BNL - FNAL - LBNL - SLAC Magnet Systems Status and Plansin view of the Chamonix Workshop discussions andthe LHC Luminosity Task Force recommendations GianLuca Sabbi LARP Collaboration Meeting 14 FNAL, April 26, 2010

  2. Outline • Magnet R&D Program components • Recent technical progress • Long Quadrupoles • Model Quadrupoles • Materials • LARP plans in the new IR upgrade scenario • Near term (2010-12) • Medium term (2012-14) • From R&D to construction • Summary

  3. Magnet R&D Program Components • Materials: • Strand specification and procurement • Cable fabrication, insulation and qualification • Heat treatment optimization • Technology development with Racetrack Coils: • Subscale Quadrupole (SQ) • Long Racetrack (LR) • Cos 2q Quadrupoles with 90 mm aperture: • Technology Quadrupole (TQ) • Long Quadrupole (LQ) • Cos 2q Quadrupoles with 120 mm aperture: • High-Field Quadrupole (HQ) Ongoing Completed ~75% ~25%

  4. LARP Magnet Development Chart Completed Achieved 200 T/m • Length scale-up 1st test 4/2010 • High field • Accelerator features

  5. Pre-Chamonix Planning Discussions • 2010-2012: complete technology demonstration (original goal) • LQ to address all length-related issues (& fully reproduce TQ results): • 2010-2011: 2-3 additional tests using 54/61 coil series • 2010-2011: Fabricate 4-6 additional coils using 108/127 • 2011(2012): ~2 tests with 108/127 coil series • HQ to address field/energy limits and accelerator quality • 2010-2011: 3-4 tests with 1 m models • Progressively push performance • 2011-2012: Extend to 1.5 or 2 m length • Use Phase 1 specifications as reference • 2012-2014: fabricate and test IR Quad prototype • 2015-2020: IR quad production for Phase 2 upgrade

  6. Recent Technical Progress • Dec. 2009 First Long Quadrupole (LQS01a) test • Achieved target gradient of 200 T/m • Dec. 2009 TQS03c high stress test (CERN) • 88% SSL w/200 MPa average coil stress • Feb. 2010 TQS03e cycling test (CERN) • No degradation after 1000 cycles • Mar. 2010 First High-Field Quadrupole (HQS01a) completed • 120 mm, designed for 15 T & field quality • Apr. 2010 LQS01b assembly completed • Improved stress distribution and higher stress • Apr. 2010 HQS01a test is underway

  7. 200 T/m Note: LQS01 & TQS02 use same strand design (RRP 54/61) 4.5 K ~3 K 1.9 K LQS01 & TQS Quench Performance Comparison of first training sequences at each temperature with all new coils

  8. LQS01 Test: Strain Gauge Measurements SHELL COOL-DOWN Design target, 4.5K Design target, 293K Design target, 4.5K COIL (Ti POLE) COOL-DOWN Design target, 293K AXIAL RODS COOL-DOWN Unloading Design target, 4.5K Design target, 293K COIL (Ti POLE) EXCITATION

  9. Analysis of Mechanical Results • Observed behavior attributed to coil-pad surface mismatch • Can be compensated by removing G10 shim at interface • Eventually, coil oversize needs to be corrected by tooling/process FEA analysis Pressure-sensitive film test

  10. LQ Plan 2010-11

  11. TQS03c High Stress Test Coil layer 1 stress evolution - sq Calculated peak stresses in TQS03c 260 MPa @ 4.5K • Systematic investigation in TQS03: • TQS03a: 120 MPa at pole, 93% SSL • TQS03b: 160 MPa at pole, 91% SSL • TQS03c: 200 MPa at pole, 88% SSL • Peak stresses are considerably higher • Considerably widens design window 255 MPa @ SSL

  12. TQS03e Cycling Test • Reduced coil stress to TQS03b levels (160 MPa average) • Pre-loading operation and test performed at CERN • Did not recover TQS03b quench current (permanent degradation) • Performed 1000 cycles with control quenches every ~150 cycles • No change in mechanical parameters or quench levels

  13. HQ Progress 2008 June Presented conceptual designs for 114 and 134 mm bore July Selection of 120 mm quadrupole aperture for Phase 1 Sept. Cable and coil cross-section geometry finalized Dec. All coil fabrication tooling in procurement 2009 Mar. All coil and structure components in procurement Apr. Cables for ~10 coils fabricated (54/61 and 108/127) Sept. Coil 1 completed and coil 2 wound Nov. CM13 Dec. Coil 2 completed, coil 3-4 reacted, coil 5 wound 2010 Jan. Structure pre-assembly completed Feb Coil 1-4 completed Mar Assembly completed Apr Coil #5 completed, #6 potted, #7 reacted, #8 wound Apr. HQ01a test underway

  14. Layer 1 Winding Layer 2 Winding Structure assembly Instrumentation trace Coil 1 Quench heater Alignment slot Coil and Structure Fabrication

  15. HQ01a Test Status and Next Steps • Cool-down completed (4/19-22): • Next steps: • 4/26-30: Heater tests, magnetic measurements • 5/3-7: Quench training

  16. HQ Next Steps • One-meter model optimization: • Pre-load, alignment, quench protection and thermal studies • Cored cables to control dynamic effects • Structure optimization for production and accelerator integration • Two-meter extension: field quality & comparison with NbTi models Radial bladders/keys Cooling channels Support/alignment fiducials Laminated collar Pressure vessel/end terminations

  17. HQ Plan 2010-11

  18. Materials R&D • Three strand designs used in LARP: • MJR 54/61: TQS01, TQC01, SQ • RRP 54/61: LR, TQ02, LQS01(2), HQ01 • RRP 108/127: TQS03, HQ01a, (LQS03) • RRP 54/61: • Production wire, highest Jc, long piece length, best characterized • Large sub-elements, flux jumps esp. in larger diameter wires • RRP 108/127: • Deff reduced by 30%, very good results in TQS03  10-20% lower Jc, not fully optimized for production • New options from the HEP Conductor Development Program: • Ti-doped RRP: HQ cable/coil will be fabricated in 2010 • RRP 217: promising but still requiring R&D

  19. Cable R&D • Stable and consistent cable production: TQ (30 UL, 65 m each); LQ (15 UL. 200 m each); LR (3 UL, 200 m each); HQ (10 UL, 100 m each) • Production so far has followed a 2-step process: • First pass cable followed by anneal and re-roll • Next R&D steps: • Ti-doped RRP wire (to qualify for purchase by LARP) • One-pass cable w/pre-annealed wire (lower cost, SS core) • Addition of a SS or glass core (control of dynamic effects) • R&D cables will be tested in HQ 1-meter coils • Best results to be incorporated in HQ 2-meter models

  20. Length considerations for the IR upgrade • HQ short sample gradient is 200 T/m @ 4.5K & 220 T/m @ 1.9K • Assume operation at 170 T/m and same basic layout as baseline LHC •  magnet length is ~7.4 m (Q1 & Q3), 6.4 m (Q2a & Q2b) • Half length elements: ~4.1 m (Q1/Q3), ~3.5 m (Q2a/b) w/10% factor • Technical comparison: • Full length elements are clearly preferred for optimal IR performance • Full length elements should be less costly for production • However, they require new infrastructure • Full length elements need to be demonstrated experimentally • This can impact the schedule and decision process • Half-length elements could be considered as a fall-back solution • Loss of efficiency is 5-15% depending on implementation

  21. Medium term Nb3Sn development (2012-14) Goal: demonstrate full-length magnet performance to minimize the technical and schedule risk to the project • The existing (FNAL) infrastructure allows fabrication of coils up to 6 m length. • As a first step, we could aim at testing of individual 6 m long coils in a suitable support structure by 2014 • The 6 m long coils could be based on LR, LQ or HQ design • The 120 mm (HQ) design is strongly preferred since it could directly lead to assembly of a 6 m long IR Quad prototype • However, is more expensive to fabricate and test then the other two alternatives • Results of 2 m model Quadrupoles and 6 m coil scale-up will provide required information for detailed IR design and project planning/initiation

  22. Production schedule • Define production line: complete set of winding, curing, reaction, • potting infrastructure, tooling, crew • Assuming that a production line delivers one coil every four weeks: • 64 coils ~7 m long: ~5 years with 1 production line • ~2.5 years with 2 production lines • One year from coil production to magnet production completion • Questions: • Set-up time (infrastructure and tooling) • LARP can contribute to an efficient start • Ramp up time, how long and what productivity • Process optimization for production • Conductor procurement schedule

  23. From R&D to Construction The LARP R&D program components will inform the decision process and develop the IR Quad design, tooling and fabrication process: • LQ, HQ-1m & HQ-2m provide a basis for the 2013 technology choice • 6-m mirror program provides a basis for tooling design & coil fabrication • 6-m Quadrupole program provides a basis for IR Quad structure/assembly

  24. Summary • Significant technical progress during the last 6 months: LQ 200 T/m milestone and further optimization, robust performance in TQ, and completion of the first HQ • The near term magnet R&D plan (2010-2012) is well aligned with a technology decision in 2013 • Systematic testing of LARP Nb3Sn models and CERN NbTi models with same specs will provide direct technology comparison and qualification • The medium term magnet R&D plan (2012-2014) is being formulated with the goal of minimizing the technical and schedule risk for construction • Extension of the HQ design to 6 m length appears to be the most effective strategy

More Related