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Superconducting Magnets at Fermilab

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Title: Superconducting Magnets at Fermilab


1
Superconducting Magnets at Fermilab
  • Superconducting accelerator magnet development
    and fabrication at Fermilab has a long history of
    success oriented toward practical magnets for
    real accelerators.
  • The Fermilab program is aimed at the most
    important issues of superconducting accelerator
    magnet development.
  • Superconducting magnet design, production and
    testing fits the mission of the Laboratory and
    the present U.S. HEP program.
  • It supports the Fermilab accelerators.
  • It is an important part of the U.S. HEP program
    at the LHC.
  • The RD program supports the U.S. high-energy
    physics plan for the future as presented in the
    recent HEPAP Subpanel report.
  • Our RD is important for upgrades to strengthen
    the LHC HEP experiments and U.S. accelerator
    physics capability.
  • Magnet RD now is necessary to be able to make a
    decision that will permit construction of a VLHC
    within 20 years.

2
Outline of the Presentations
  • Overview
  • History, Motivations, Present Programs, Parameter
    Choices, Personnel, Future Directions, Cost
    History Projections, Summary
  • Magnet Technical Programs Achievements
  • Tevatron, LHC, High-Field Magnets, Superferric
    Magnets
  • Superconducting Materials RD and Testing
  • Infrastructure (with a tour)
  • Materials RD, Model Magnet RD, Production,
    Testing
  • Plans for the Future
  • Second-Generation LHC Insertions, VLHC Magnets

3
History
  • Fermilab has a long history of SC magnet
    development oriented toward practical magnets for
    real accelerators
  • Tevatron
  • First superconducting synchrotron magnets
    designed built (almost exclusively at
    Fermilab), 1973-1983.
  • First collider operation, 1985
  • Tevatron Low Beta Quadrupoles, installed
    operating, 1990
  • SSC Dipole RD and fabrication, 13 dipoles
    delivered, 1992
  • LHC IR Quadrupole development and fabrication,
    1996 - 2004
  • Starting Nb3Sn accelerator magnet development,
    1999
  • VLHC
  • LHC 2nd generation Quads
  • Designing for construction is intrinsic to the
    Fermilab culture. Striking a balance between RD
    and construction is important for the health and
    vigor of the Fermilab program.

4
Motivations
  • Maintenance Improvement of the Tevatron
  • Fermilab must maintain the human and physical
    resources to keep the Tevatron working, and
    upgrade it as necessary.
  • By having a first-class RD program, we attract
    top-notch scientists engineers, and keep our
    capabilities sharp.
  • Staying at the Frontier of SC Magnet Technology
    for HEP
  • The U.S. LHC Accelerator Project has made
    important contributions to the LHC.
  • The insertion quads design, development,
    fabrication and test at Fermilab is the flagship
    of that program.
  • The LHC Accelerator Research Program will greatly
    strengthen U.S HEP at LHC.
  • The 2nd-generation IR quadrupoles from Nb3Sn will
    be the flagship of that program, and will advance
    U.S. Nb3Sn magnet development.
  • Keeping Our Options Open for the Future.
  • HEP will almost certainly need to move to the
    next energy scale, 10 TeV, or more. The only
    sure way to do this is a hadron collider, and the
    most likely location is in the U.S.

5
The Magnet RD Program
  • Two paths to successful Nb3Sn magnets for
    accelerators.
  • Cosine-Q Nb3Sn dipoles and quadrupoles
  • Flexibility - multiple applications
  • Common-coil dipoles
  • Possible react wind - may be a money-saver for
    the VLHC
  • Single-layer design solves the most serious
    problems of the common-coil concept
  • Supporting RD
  • SC materials
  • Strand and cable development and testing
  • Fast-response coil RD
  • Pancake-coil magnets

6
Recent Program Changes
  • The superferric magnet program is being closed
    down
  • Limited resources has forced us to close this
    successful RD program
  • Motivation is a staged concept of the VLHC
  • Attempting to bring this program to a soft
    landing by carefully documenting its
    accomplishments

7
High-Field Cosine Q Designs
  • The cos-q designs are flexible and have many
    applications
  • Single and double aperture, dipoles and
    quadrupoles, warm and cold iron
  • A continuation of Fermilab cos-q dipoles,
    low-beta quads and LHC quadrupoles.
  • A familiar design at Fermilab using new (to us)
    materials.
  • Can be extended naturally to 2nd generation LHC
    quads
  • Up to now, restricted to wind react method with
    Nb3Sn

8
High-Field Common-Coil Design
  • The Common-Coil design is intrinsically 2-in-1
  • The gentle bends may permit react wind methods
    with existing materials
  • Possibly reducing the cost of high-field magnets
  • It may be have applications with HTS and MgB2,
    etc.
  • The Fermilab design is wound directly into a
    stress-management collar structure
  • Designed to deal with huge forces intrinsic to
    common coil
  • Production innovations may reduce the cost

9
Superferric Magnet RD
  • Design driven by the staged VLHC concept
  • 2-in-1 warm iron 2T bend field
  • 100kA Transmission Line
  • Alternating gradient, 65m Length
  • Warm Vacuum System
  • Bringing the first phase of the RD to a smooth
    conclusion
  • Finishing the active and interesting RD efforts
  • 100 kA power supply leads
  • Assembly welding techniques
  • Operation of model magnets
  • Publish the results
  • Put work and infrastructure into a state that can
    be restarted if desired

10
Materials RD
  • Excellent infrastructure for strand development
    and testing
  • Ovens, SEM, optical microscope, Teslatron
  • Cabling machine, cable tests at NHMFL
  • Participates in the national Nb3Sn RD program
  • Collaborating in Phase II SBIR for more flexible
    Nb3Sn cable
  • Working on other materials, too
  • Ceramic cloth and binders
  • Infrastructure includes Instrons, strain gauges,
    etc.

11
Generic Development Test
  • The Racetrack Coil effort is a common-coil magnet
    with flat coils.
  • Primarily used to investigate procedures and
    materials needed for react wind Nb3Sn
  • The simplified coils allowed us to start react
    wind RD earlier
  • Permits fast turn-around on model fabrication and
    we are investigating ways to make it faster

12
Field Strength
  • Although very-high-field magnets will be needed
    for some applications, we have concluded that
    very-high magnetic field is not optimum for a
    very-high-energy collider.
  • Colliders with very-high-field magnets cost more.
  • Synchrotron radiation limits the energy and
    luminosity for high-energy, high-field colliders.
  • Large-circumference rings (moderate field) may
    permit the use of photon stops, which could
    remove many of the limits due to synchrotron
    radiation.
  • We believe that 12 T is a realistic goal, and
    optimum for the total cost and performance of a
    VLHC with E ? 100 TeV.

13
Motivation for a Strong Program Now
  • Experience indicates that it is not too early to
    start
  • An LHC IR quad upgrade should be ready in
    2013-2014, which means prototypes should be
    tested by 2010.
  • A construction start on a VLHC is part of the
    HEPAP Subpanel 20-year plan.
  • Technical issues need to be resolved much earlier
  • The penalties for not being technically ready are
    severe
  • Its clear there are technical challenges in
    Nb3Sn high-field magnets.
  • Now is a good time to increase the RD effort
  • Experienced people are coming off the U.S. LHC
    project and can make significant contributions to
    the magnet RD
  • Now is the right time for the U.S. to take the
    world-wide lead in magnet RD.
  • Investment in SC accelerator magnet RD is
    decreasing outside the U.S., partially because of
    LHC construction.

14
Experience indicates its not too early
15
Effort Distribution, Average for 2002
  • Scientists Engineers
    Drafters Techs
  • LHC Insertions 2.7 7.0 1.6
    15.5
  • LHC Project 0.6 1.01.8 CS --
    --
  • Magnet RD 3.8 2 stdnts 9.3 3.0
    5.5
  • Tevatron 1 lt1 lt1 3
  • Total (w/o project) 9.5 17.0 5.0
    24.0
  • By comparison
  • LHC (FY1999) 7.2 15.7 13.0
    15.4
  • Recent and planned personnel activity in Magnet
    RD
  • In recent years, two experienced engineers and
    one scientist went to linear collider and one
    engineering physicist and one scientist left
    Fermilab.
  • We budgeted this year for one new postdoc, one
    engineer in materials RD, and two replacement
    students.

16
Future Directions
  • The Fermilab program will remain focused on the
    important and primary goals
  • The cos-q dipole program will morph into the
    LHC-ARP 2nd generation quadrupole program over
    the next three years, in collaboration with LBNL
    and BNL
  • The stress-management common-coil approach will
    be strengthened as long as it appears useful for
    VLHC
  • We will start to make long magnets (gt10 m) of the
    2nd generation quad and the common coil in 2009
  • The racetrack coil effort and the materials RD
    work support the material and engineering needs
    of the Fermilab and national programs, and will
    continue

17
Superconducting Magnet Budgets
18
Superconducting Magnet Budgets
19
What This Program Accomplishes
  • By 2010 we will have accomplished all of the
    goals outlined in the 2002 HEPAP Subpanel Report
  • Strengthened our magnet team for Tevatron-based
    HEP
  • Developed and brought to production readiness a
    2nd-generation IR quadrupole to improve the LHC
    HEP program
  • Developed at least one magnet technology suitable
    for a high-field VLHC
  • If we succeed in both designs, we will have the
    knowledge to help choose which is better
  • We will have the information to make accurate
    cost and performance estimates and help choose a
    VLHC concept from among the many options
    Staged? Low-, Moderate-, or High-field?
  • We will be able to make a timely choice and turn
    up the relevant program to industrialize the VLHC
    magnets by 2015
  • All of this with a program that has approximately
    the same level of funding as our present program
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