Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where C. Sylvester is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by C. Sylvester.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2005

R&D of Nb/sub 3/Sn accelerator magnets at Fermilab

A.V. Zlobin; G. Ambrosio; N. Andreev; E. Barzi; B. Bordini; R. Bossert; R. Carcagno; D.R. Chichili; J. DiMarco; L. Elementi; S. Feher; V. S. Kashikhin; V.V. Kashikhin; R. Kephart; M.J. Lamm; P.J. Limon; I. Novitski; D. Orris; Y. Pischalnikov; P. Schlabach; R. Stanek; J. Strait; C. Sylvester; M. Tartaglia; J.C. Tompkins; D. Turrioni; G.V. Velev; R. Yamada; V. Yarba

Fermilab is developing and investigating different high-field magnets (HFM) for present and future accelerators. The HFM R&D program focused on the 10-12 T magnets based on Nb/sub 3/Sn superconductor and explored both basic magnet technologies for brittle superconductors-wind-and-react and react-and-wind. Magnet design studies in support of LHC upgrades and VLHC were conducted. A series of 1-m long cos-theta dipole models based on the wind-and-react technique was fabricated and tested. Three 1-m long flat racetracks and the common coil dipole model, based on a single-layer coil and react-and-wind technique, were also fabricated and tested. Extensive theoretical and experimental studies of electro-magnetic instabilities in Nb/sub 3/Sn strands, cables and magnets were performed and led to a successful 10 T dipole model. This paper presents the details of Fermilabs HFM program, reports its status and major results, and formulates the next steps for the program.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2000

Field alignment of quadrupole magnets for the LHC interaction regions

J. DiMarco; H. Glass; M.J. Lamm; P. Schlabach; C. Sylvester; J.C. Tompkins; I. Krzywinski

High-gradient superconducting quadrupole magnets are being developed by the US LHC Accelerator Project for the Interaction Regions of the Large Hadron Collider. Determination of the magnetic axis for alignment of these magnets will be performed using a single stretched wire system. These measurements will be done both at room and cryogenic temperatures with very long wire lengths, up to 20 m. This paper reports on the stretched wire alignment methodology to be employed: and the results of recent room-temperature measurements on a 2 m model magnet with long wire lengths.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2011

Test Results of the First 3.7 m Long Nb3Sn Quadrupole by LARP and Future Plans

G. Ambrosio; N. Andreev; M. Anerella; E. Barzi; B. Bingham; D. Bocian; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; G. Chlachidize; D.R. Dietderich; J. Escallier; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; A. Godeke; R. Hafalia; R. Hannaford; G. Jochen; V.V. Kashikhin; M. J. Kim; P. Kovach; M.J. Lamm; A.D. McInturff; J. Muratore; F. Nobrega; I. Novitsky; D. Orris; E. Prebys; S. Prestemon; G. Sabbi

In December 2009 during its first cold test, LQS01, the first Long Nb3Sn Quadrupole made by LARP (LHC Accelerator Research Program, a collaboration of BNL, FNAL, LBNL and SLAC), reached its target field gradient of 200 T/m. This target was set in 2005 by the US Department of Energy, CERN and LARP, as a significant milestone toward the development of Nb3Sn quadrupoles for possible use in LHC luminosity upgrades. LQS01 is a 90 mm aperture, 3.7 m long quadrupole using Nb3Sn coils. The coil layout is equal to the layout used in the LARP Technological Quadrupoles (TQC and TQS models). Pre-stress and support are provided by a segmented aluminum shell pre-loaded using bladders and keys, similarly to the TQS models. After the first test the magnet was disassembled, reassembled with an optimized pre-stress, and reached 222 T/m at 4.5 K. In this paper we present the results of both tests and the next steps of the Long Quadrupole R&D.


Proceedings of the 1997 Particle Accelerator Conference (Cat. No.97CH36167) | 1997

A new facility to test superconducting accelerator magnets

M.J. Lamm; J. DiMarco; E. Desavouret; S. Feher; J.D. Garvey; C. Hess; P.J. Limon; Jerzy Nogiec; D. Orris; J. Pachnik; T. Peterson; S. Sharonov; J. Strait; C. Sylvester; J.W. Sim; M. Tartaglia; J.C. Tompkins; A.V. Zlobin

Future high energy accelerators such as the Large Hadron Collider require accelerator magnets with the highest possible fields. For NbTi conductor magnets, this means operating at superfluid helium temperatures in the range of 1.8-1.9 K. As part of Fermilabs superconducting magnet R&D program, we have built a facility to test magnets in a vertical dewar of superfluid liquid helium. The dewar is designed for magnets up to 4 m length and 620 mm diameter, with a temperature range of 1.8 K to 4.4 K and 1 atmosphere helium. The power system consists of 10 kA and 8.8 kA power supplies operating in parallel, with a bus work and an extraction circuit that can accommodate up a 18 kA excitation current. A description of the facility as well as operational experience from the first magnet tests are presented.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2007

Development and Test of LARP Technological Quadrupole (TQC) Magnet

S. Feher; R. Bossert; G. Ambrosio; N. Andreev; E. Barzi; R. Carcagno; V. S. Kashikhin; V.V. Kashikhin; M.J. Lamm; F. Nobrega; I. Novitski; Y. Pischalnikov; C. Sylvester; M. Tartaglia; D. Turrioni; G. Whitson; R. Yamada; A.V. Zlobin; S. Caspi; D. T. Dietderich; P. Ferracin; R. Hannaford; A.R. Hafalia; G. Sabbi

In support of the development of a large-aperture superconducting quadrupole for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) luminosity upgrade, two-layer quadrupole models (TQC and TQS) with 90 mm aperture are being constructed at Fermilab and LBNL within the framework of the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP). This paper describes the construction and test of model TQC01. ANSYS calculations of the structure are compared with measurements during construction. Fabrication experience is described and in-process measurements are reported. Test results at 4.5 K are presented, including magnet training, current ramp rate studies and magnet quench current. Results of magnetic measurements at helium temperature are also presented.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2001

Status of the LHC inner triplet quadrupole program at Fermilab

N. Andreev; T. Arkan; P. Bauer; R. Bossert; J. Brandt; J. Carson; S. Caspi; D.R. Chichili; L. Chiesa; Christine Darve; J. DiMarco; S. Feher; A. Ghosh; H. Glass; Y. Huang; J. Kerby; M.J. Lamm; A.A. Markarov; A.D. McInturff; T. H. Nicol; A. Nobrega; I. Novitski; T. Ogitsu; D. Orris; J.P. Ozelis; T. Page; T. Peterson; R. Rabehl; W. Robotham; G. Sabbi

Fermilab, in collaboration with LBNL and BNL, is developing a quadrupole for installation in the interaction region inner triplets of the LHC. This magnet is required to have an operating gradient of 215 T/m across a 70 mm coil bore, and operates in superfluid helium at 1.9 K. A 2 m magnet program addressing mechanical, magnetic, quench protection, and thermal issues associated with the design was completed earlier this year, and production of the first full length, cryostatted prototype magnet is underway. This paper summarizes the conclusions of the 2 m program, and the design and status of the first full-length prototype magnet.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2005

Development and test of Nb/sub 3/Sn cos-theta dipoles based on PIT strands

A.V. Zlobin; G. Ambrosio; N. Andreev; E. Barzi; R. Bossert; R. Carcagno; D.R. Chichili; L. Elementi; S. Feher; V. S. Kashikhin; V.V. Kashikhin; M.J. Lamm; I. Novitski; Y. Pischalnikov; C. Sylvester; M. Tartaglia; R. Yamada

Fermilab is involved in the development of new generation high-field accelerator magnets using state-of-the-art Nb/sub 3/Sn strands produced using different technologies. Two 1-m long models-mirror configuration and dipole magnet-were fabricated recently at Fermilab based on powder-in-tube (PIT) Nb/sub 3/Sn strands with small effective filament size. This paper describes the parameters of superconducting strands and cable, the details of magnet design and fabrication procedure, and reports the results of PIT coil testing.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2014

Performance of HQ02, an Optimized Version of the 120 mm

G. Chlachidze; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; F. Borgnolutti; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; D. W. Cheng; D.R. Dietderich; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; A. Godeke; A.R. Hafalia; M. Marchevsky; D. Orris; Pallab Kanti Roy; G. Sabbi; T. Salmi; J. Schmalzle; C. Sylvester; M. Tartaglia; J.C. Tompkins; P. Wanderer; X. Wang; A.V. Zlobin

In preparation for the high luminosity upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) is developing a new generation of large aperture high-field quadrupoles based on Nb3Sn technology. One meter long and 120 mm diameter HQ quadrupoles are currently produced as a step toward the eventual aperture of 150 mm. Tests of the first series of HQ coils revealed the necessity for further optimization of the coil design and fabrication process. A new model (HQ02) has been fabricated with several design modifications, including a reduction of the cable size and an improved insulation scheme. Coils in this magnet are made of a cored cable using 0.778 mm diameter Nb3Sn strands of RRP 108/127 subelement design. The HQ02 magnet has been fabricated at LBNL and BNL, and then tested at Fermilab. This paper summarizes the performance of HQ02 at 4.5 K and 1.9 K temperatures.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2007

\hbox{Nb}_{3}\hbox{Sn}

E. Barzi; Giorgio Ambrosio; N. Andreev; R. Bossert; R. Carcagno; S. Feher; V. S. Kashikhin; V.V. Kashikhin; M.J. Lamm; F. Nobrega; I. Novitski; Y. Pishalnikov; C. Sylvester; M. Tartaglia; D. Turrioni; Ryota Yamada; A.V. Zlobin; Mark Field; Seong-Kwan Hong; Jeff Parrell; Ye Zhang

The high performance NbSn strand produced by Oxford Superconducting Technology (OST) with the Restack Rod Process (RRP) is presently considered as a baseline conductor for the Fermilabs accelerator magnet R∓mp;mp;D program. To improve the strand stability in the current and field range expected in magnet models, the number of subelements in the strand was increased by a factor of two (from 54 to 108), which resulted in a smaller effective filament size. The performance of the 1.0 and 0.7 mm strands of this design was studied using virgin and deformed strand samples. 27-strand Rutherford cables made of 1 mm strand were also tested using a superconducting transformer, small racetrack and 1-m shell-type dipole coils. This paper presents the RRP strand and cable parameters, and reports the results of strand, cable and coil testing.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2002

LARP Quadrupole

N. Andreev; G. Ambrosio; E. Barzi; R. Carcagno; D.R. Chichili; J. DiMarco; S. Feher; L. Imbasciati; V.V. Kashikhin; M.J. Lamm; P.J. Limon; D. Orris; P. Schlabach; C. Sylvester; M. Tartaglia; I. Terechkine; J.C. Tompkins; S. Yadav; R. Yamada; Alexander V. Zlobin

Two short Nb/sub 3/Sn dipole models based on a single-bore cos-theta coil with a cold iron yoke were fabricated and tested at Fermilab. This paper summarizes the details of magnet design and fabrication procedure, and reports the test results including quench performance and quench heater studies, and the magnetic measurements.

Collaboration


Dive into the C. Sylvester's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge