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Dive into the research topics where Christine Darve is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine Darve.


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.


PACS2001. Proceedings of the 2001 Particle Accelerator Conference (Cat. No.01CH37268) | 2001

Synchrotron radiation issues in the VLHC

Pierre Bauer; Christine Darve; P. Limon; N. Solyak; I. Terechkine; M. Pivi; W. C. Turner; S. Sharma

Fermilab and other DOE high energy physics laboratories are studying the possibility of a Very Large Hadron Collider (VLHC) for operation in the post-LHC era. The current VLHC design foresees a 2-staged approach, where the second stage (referred to as VLHC-2) has a proton energy up to 100 TeV at a peak luminosity of 2/sup ./10/sup 34/ cm/sup -2/ sec/sup -1/. The protons are guided through a large 233 km circumference ring with 10 T bending magnets using Nb/sub 3/Sn superconductor at 5 K. The synchrotron radiation (SR) power emitted by the beam in such a machine is /spl sim/5 W/m/beam. However, other VLHC scenarios with smaller rings and higher luminosity result in SR power levels exceeding this value, reaching 10 or even 20 W/m/beam. Intercepting and removing this power in a cryogenic environment is a major challenge. In this paper a discussion of SR in the VLHC-2, and various approaches to the issue, are presented.


ADVANCES IN CRYOGENIC ENGINEERING: Transactions of the Cryogenic Engineering#N#Conference - CEC, Vol. 53 | 2008

SUPERCONDUCTING RADIO-FREQUENCY MODULES TEST FACILITY OPERATING EXPERIENCE

W. Soyars; R. Bossert; Christine Darve; Brian Degraff; Arkadiy Klebaner; A. Martinez; L. Pei; J. Theilacker

Fermilab is heavily engaged and making strong technical contributions to the superconducting radio-frequency research and development program (SRF R&D). Four major SRF test areas are being constructed to enable vertical and horizontal cavity testing, as well as cryomodule testing. The existing Fermilab cryogenic infrastructure has been modified to service the SRF R&D needs. The projects first stage has been successfully completed, which allows for distribution of cryogens for a single-cavity cryomodule using the existing Cryogenic Test Facility (CTF) that houses three Tevatron satellite refrigerators. The cooling capacity available for cryomodule testing at Meson Detector Building (MDB) results from the liquefaction capacity of the CTF cryogenic system. The cryogenic system for a single 9-cell cryomodule is currently operational. The paper describes the status, challenges and operational experience of the initial phase of the project.


Joint Conference of the Transactions of the Cryogenic Engineering Conference (CEC) / Transactions of the International Cryogenic Materials Conference | 2014

Status of the ESS cryogenic system

John Weisend; Christine Darve; Stephen Gallimore; Wolfgang Hees; John Jurns; Torsten Köttig; Peter Ladd; Stephen Molloy; Thomas Parker; Xilong Wang

The European Spallation Source (ESS) is a neutron science facility funded by a collaboration of 17 European countries currently under design and construction in Lund, Sweden. The centerpiece of ESS is a 2.5 GeV proton linac utilizing superconducting RF cavities operating at 2 K. In addition to cooling the SRF cavities, cryogenics is also used at ESS in the liquid hydrogen moderators surrounding the target. ESS also uses both liquid helium and liquid nitrogen in a number of the planned neutron instruments. There is also a significant cryogenic installation associated with the site acceptance testing of the ESS cryomodules. The ESS cryogenic system consists of 3 separate helium refrigeration/liquefaction plants supplying the accelerator, target moderators and instruments. An extensive cryogenic distribution system connects the accelerator cryoplant with the cryomodules. This paper describes the preliminary design of the ESS cryogenic system including the expected heat loads. Challenges associated with the required high reliability and turn-down capability will also be discussed. A unique feature of ESS is its commitment to sustainability and energy recovery. A conceptual design for recovering waste heat from the helium compressors for use in the Lund district heating system will also be described.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2003

Progress in absorber R & D for muon cooling

Daniel M. Kaplan; E.L. Black; M. Boghosian; Kevin W. Cassel; R.P. Johnson; S. Geer; Carol Johnstone; M. Popovic; S. Ishimoto; K. Yoshimura; L. Bandura; M. A C Cummings; A. Dyshkant; D. Hedin; D. Kubik; Christine Darve; Y. Kuno; D. Errede; M. Haney; S. Majewski; M. Reep; D. J. Summers

A stored-muon-beam neutrino factory may require transverse ionization cooling of the muon beam. We describe recent progress in research and development on energy absorbers for muon-beam cooling carried out by a collaboration of university and laboratory groups.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2002

LHC interaction region quadrupole cryostat design and fabrication

T. H. Nicol; Christine Darve; Y. Huang; T. Page

The cryostat of a Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Interaction Region (IR) quadrupole magnet consists of all components of the inner triplet except the magnet assembly itself. It serves to support the magnet accurately and reliably within the vacuum vessel, to house all required cryogenic piping, and to insulate the cold mass from heat radiated and conducted from the environment. It must function reliably during storage, shipping and handling, normal magnet operation, quenches, and seismic excitations, and must be able to be manufactured at low cost. The major components of the cryostat are the vacuum vessel, thermal shield, multilayer insulation system, cryogenic piping, and suspension system. The overall design of a cryostat for superconducting accelerator magnets requires consideration of fluid flow, proper selection of materials for their thermal and structural performance at both ambient and operating temperature, and knowledge of the environment to which the magnets will be subjected over the course of their expected operating lifetime. This paper describes the current LHC IR inner triplet quadrupole magnet cryostats being designed and manufactured at Fermilab as part of the US-LHC collaboration, and includes discussions on the structural and thermal considerations involved in the development of each of the major systems.


ADVANCES IN CRYOGENIC ENGINEERING: Transactions of the Cryogenic Engineering Conference - CEC | 2014

The ESS spoke cavity cryomodules

S. Bousson; Christine Darve; Patxi Duthil; Nuno Elias; Steve Molloy; Denis Reynet; Jean-Pierre Thermeau

The European Spallation Source (ESS) is a multi-disciplinary research centre under design and construction in Lund, Sweden. This new facility is funded by a collaboration of 17 European countries and is expected to be up to 30 times brighter than today’s leading facilities and neutron sources. The ESS will enable new opportunities for researchers in the fields of life sciences, energy, environmental technology, cultural heritage and fundamental physics. A 5 MW long pulse proton accelerator is used to reach this goal. The pulsed length is 2.86 ms, the repetition frequency is 14 Hz (4 % duty cycle), and the beam current is 62.5 mA. It is composed of one string of spoke cavity cryomodule and two strings of elliptical cavity cryomodules. This paper introduces the thermo-mechanical design and expected operation of the ESS spoke cavity cryomodules. These cryomodules contain two double spoke bulk Niobium cavities operating at 2 K and at a frequency of 352.21 MHz. The superconducting section of the Spoke Linac accelerates the beam from 90 MeV to 220 MeV. A Spoke Cavity Cryomodule Technology Demonstrator will be built and tested in order to validate the ESS series production.


ADVANCES IN CRYOGENIC ENGEINEERING: Transactions of the Cryogenic Engineering Conference - CEC | 2004

The Liquid Hydrogen System for the MuCool Test Area

Christine Darve; Arkadiy Klebaner; A. Martinez; Barry Norris; L. Pei; Ww Lau; S. Yang

A new MuCool test area (MTA) is under construction at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. This facility will house a cryo-system composed of a liquid hydrogen absorber enclosed in a 5 Tesla magnet. The total volume of liquid hydrogen in the system is 25 liters. Helium gas at 14 K is provided by an in-house refrigerator and will sub-cool the hydrogen system to 17 K. Liquid hydrogen temperature in the absorber is chosen to satisfy the requirement of a density change smaller than +/- 2.5 %. To accommodate this goal and to remove the heat deposited by a beam, a pump will circulate liquid hydrogen at a rate of 450 g/s. The cooling loop was optimized with respect to the heat transport in liquid hydrogen and the pressure drop across the pump. Specific instrumentation will permit an intrinsically safe monitoring and control of the cryo-system. Safety issues are the main driver of the cryo-design.This paper describes the implementation of the liquid hydrogen system at MTA and the preliminary results of a finite element analysis used to size the LH2 absorber force-flow.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2003

Convection-type LH2 absorber R&D for muon ionization cooling

S. Ishimoto; L. Bandura; E.L. Black; M. Boghosian; Kevin W. Cassel; M. A C Cummings; Christine Darve; A. Dyshkant; D. Errede; S. Geer; M. Haney; D. Hedin; R.P. Johnson; Carol Johnstone; Daniel M. Kaplan; D. Kubik; Y. Kuno; S. Majewski; M. Popovic; M. Reep; D. J. Summers; S. Suzuki; K. Yoshimura

Abstract A feasibility study on liquid hydrogen (LH 2 ) absorbers for muon ionization cooling is reported. In muon ionization cooling, an LH 2 absorber is required to have a high cooling power greater than 100 W to cool heat deposited by muons passing through. That heat in LH 2 can be removed at either external or internal heat exchangers, which are cooled by cold helium gas. As one of the internal heat exchanger types, a convection-type absorber is proposed. In the convection-type absorber, heat is taken away by the convection of LH 2 in the absorber. The heat exchanger efficiency for the convection-type absorber is calculated. A possible design is presented.


Joint Conference of the Transactions of the Cryogenic Engineering Conference (CEC) / Transactions of the International Cryogenic Materials Conference | 2014

The ESS elliptical cavity cryomodules

Christine Darve; Pierre Bosland; Guillaume Devanz; Gilles Olivier; Bertrand Renard; Jean-Pierre Thermeau

The European Spallation Source (ESS) is a multi-disciplinary research centre under design and construction in Lund, Sweden. This new facility is funded by a collaboration of 17 European countries and is expected to be up to 30 times brighter than today’s leading facilities and neutron sources. The ESS will enable new opportunities for researchers in the fields of life sciences, energy, environmental technology, cultural heritage and fundamental physics. A 5 MW long pulse proton accelerator is used to reach this goal. The pulsed length is 2.86 ms, the repetition frequency is 14 Hz (4 % duty cycle), and the beam current is 62.5 mA. The superconducting section of the Linac accelerates the beam from 80 MeV to 2.0 GeV. It is composed of one string of spoke cavity cryomodule and two strings of elliptical cavity cryomodules. These cryomodules contain four elliptical Niobium cavities operating at 2 K and at a frequency of 704.42 MHz. This paper introduces the thermo-mechanical design, the prototyping and the expected operation of the ESS elliptical cavity cryomodules. An Elliptical Cavity Cryomodule Technology Demonstrator (ECCTD) will be built and tested in order to validate the ESS series production.

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Nuno Elias

European Spallation Source

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S. Bousson

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Stephen Molloy

European Spallation Source

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Denis Reynet

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Gilles Olivier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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