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Dive into the research topics where J. Escallier is active.

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Featured researches published by J. Escallier.


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.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2004

Superconducting magnet system at the 50 GeV proton beam line for the J-PARC neutrino experiment

T. Ogitsu; Y. Makida; T. Kobayashi; Y. Ajima; Y. Doi; Norio Higashi; Yosuke Iwamoto; A. Ichikawa; N. Kimura; Tatsushi Nakamoto; Hirokatsu Ohhata; T. Shintomi; M. Takasaki; K. Tanaka; A. Terashima; Akira Yamamoto; Tetsuhiro Obana; Michael Anerella; J. Escallier; R. Gupta; G. Ganetis; M. Harrison; A. Jain; J. Muratore; B. Parker; P. Wanderer

A neutrino oscillation experiment using the J-PARC 50 GeV 0.75 MW proton beam is planned as a successor to the K2K project currently being operated at KEK. A superconducting magnet system is required for the arc section of the primary proton beam line to be within the space available at the site. A system with 28 combined function magnets is proposed to simplify the system and optimize the cost. The required fields for the magnets are 2.6 T dipole and 19 T/m quadrupole. The magnets are also required to have a large aperture, 173.4 mm diameter, to accommodate the large beam emittance. The magnets will be protected by cold diodes and cooled by forced flow supercritical helium produced by a 4.5 K, 2/spl sim/2.5 kW refrigerator. This paper reports the system overview and the design status.


Proceedings of the 2005 Particle Accelerator Conference | 2005

Serpentine Coil Topology for BNL Direct Wind Superconducting Magnets

B. Parker; J. Escallier

Serpentine winding, a recent innovation developed at BNL for direct winding superconducting magnets, allows winding a coil layer of arbitrary multipolarity in one continuous winding process and greatly simplifies magnet design and production compared to the planar patterns used before. Serpentine windings were used for the BEPC-II Upgrade and JPARC magnets and are proposed to make compact final focus magnets for the ILC. Serpentine patterns exhibit a direct connection between 2D body harmonics and harmonics derived from the integral fields. Straightforward 2D optimization yields good integral field quality with uniformly spaced (natural) coil ends. This and other surprising features of Serpentine windings are addressed in this paper.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2009

Test Results of LARP 3.6 m

Joseph F. Muratore; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; E. Barzi; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; D. W. Cheng; J. Cozzolino; D.R. Dietderich; J. Escallier; S. Feher; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; G. Ganetis; A. Ghosh; R. Gupta; A.R. Hafalia; C. R. Hannaford; P. Joshi; P. Kovach; A.F. Lietzke; W. Louie; A. Marone; Al McInturff; F. Nobrega; GianLuca Sabbi; J. Schmalzle; R. Thomas; D. Turrioni; P. Wanderer

As part of the LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) to build a high performance quadrupole magnet with Nb3Sn conductor, a pair of 3.6 m-long Nb3Sn racetrack coils has been made at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) and installed in two shell-type support structures built by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL). These magnet assemblies have been tested at 4.5 K at BNL to gauge the effect of extended length and prestress on the mechanical performance of the long structure compared to earlier short models. This paper presents the results of quench testing and compares the overall performance of the two versions of the support structure. We also summarize the shell strain measurements and discuss the variation of quench current with ramp rate.


ieee particle accelerator conference | 2007

{\rm Nb}_{3}{\rm Sn}

B. Parker; M. Anerella; J. Escallier; P. He; A. Jain; A. Marone; Y. Nosochkov; Andrei Seryi

The ILC beam delivery system (BDS) uses a variety of superconducting magnets to maximize luminosity and minimize background. Compact final focus quadrupoles with multifunction correction coils focus incoming beams to few nanometer spot sizes while focusing outgoing disrupted beams into a separate extraction beam line. Anti-solenoids mitigate effects from overlapping focusing and the detector solenoid field. Far from the interaction point (IP) strong octupoles help minimize IP backgrounds. A low-field but very large aperture dipole is integrated with the detector solenoid to reduce backgrounds from beamstrahlung pairs generated at the IP. Physics requirements and magnetic design solutions for the BDS superconducting magnets are reviewed in this paper.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2010

Racetrack Coils Supported by Full-Length and Segmented Shell Structures

G Ambrosio; N Andreev; M. Anerella; E Barzi; B. Bingham; D. Bocian; B. Bordini; R Bossert; L. Bottura; S. Caspi; G Chlachidize; W. M. de Rapper; D.R. Dietderich; J. Escallier; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; A. Godeke; R. Hafalia; R. Hannaford; G. Jochen; V V Kashikhin; P. Kovach; M Lamm; A.D. McInturff; J. Muratore; F Nobrega; I Novitsky; D Orris; S Peggs

The test of the first LARP (LHC Accelerator Research Program) Long Quadrupole is a significant milestone toward the development of Nb3Sn quadrupoles for LHC (Large Hadron Collider) Luminosity Upgrades. These 3.7-m long magnets, scaled from the 1-m long Technological Quadrupoles, are used to develop our capabilities to fabricate and assemble Nb3Sn coils and structures with lengths comparable to accelerator magnet dimensions. The long quadruples have a target gradient of 200 T/m in a 90-mm aperture. Pre-stress and support are provided by an Al-shell-based structure pre-loaded using bladders and keys. The coils were fabricated at BNL and FNAL, the shell-based structure was designed and assembled at LBNL, the test is performed at FNAL. In this paper we present the final steps of the development of the first model (LQS01), several upgrades to the test facility, the test results of witness cables, and the short sample limit.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2010

The superconducting magnets of the ILC beam delivery system

Tatsushi Nakamoto; K. Sasaki; Y. Ajima; Osamu Araoka; Yoshiaki Fujii; N. Hastings; Norio Higashi; Masahisa Iida; Takanobu Ishii; N. Kimura; T. Kobayashi; Y. Makida; T. Nakadaira; T. Ogitsu; Hirokatsu Ohhata; Takahiro Okamura; K. Sakashita; Shigekatsu Sugawara; Shoji Suzuki; K. Tanaka; Takayuki Tomaru; A. Terashima; Akira Yamamoto; A. Ichikawa; H. Kakuno; M. Anerella; J. Escallier; G. Ganetis; R. Gupta; A. Jain

Following success of a prototype R&D, construction of a superconducting magnet system for J-PARC neutrino beam line has been carried out since 2005. A new conceptual beam line with the superconducting combined function magnets demonstrated the successful beam transport to the neutrino production target.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2002

Final Development and Test Preparation of the First 3.7 m Long Nb3Sn Quadrupole by LARP

P. Wanderer; M. Anerella; J. Escallier; A. Ghosh; A. Jain; A. Marone; J. Muratore; B. Parker; A. Prodell; P. Thompson; K.C. Wu

Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) has completed production of the superconducting multi-function magnets that are now installed as part of the HERA luminosity upgrade at DESY. The magnets, cryostats, and lead assemblies were designed and built at BNL. To fit inside the existing detectors, the coils plus cryostat structure had to meet a challenging radial budget (e.g., 39 mm horizontally). Two types of magnets were needed and three of each type were built. Each magnet contained normal and skew quadrupole, normal and skew dipole, and sextupole coils. The magnets operate in the /spl sim/1.5 T solenoid field of a detector. The quadrupole coils produce gradients up to 13 T/m. The dipole coils generate fields up to 0.3 T. Coils were wound under computer control using either seven-strand round cable or a single strand. To simultaneously avoid excessive synchrotron radiation background scattered from the beam pipe and yet have a small cryostat, one type of magnet used a tapered coil structure. The cryogenic system incorporates cooling with both 40 K helium and supercritical helium. All of the coils were tested in liquid helium in a vertical dewar. Quench test results have been excellent. The field quality of the magnets has met the stringent requirements imposed on interaction region magnets. One magnet of each type was tested at BNL as a completed assembly to verify the performance of the leads and cryostats. Two of each type were tested at DESY and then installed in the Zeus and H1 experiments. The remaining magnets are spares. Final results of quench testing, field quality measurements and cryogenic performance are reported.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2005

Construction of Superconducting Magnet System for the J-PARC Neutrino Beam Line

T. Ogitsu; Y. Ajima; Michael Anerella; J. Escallier; G. Ganetis; R. Gupta; Dietrich Hagedorn; M. Harrison; Norio Higashi; Yosuke Iwamoto; A. Ichikawa; A. Jain; N. Kimura; T. Kobayashi; Y. Makida; J. Muratore; Tatsushi Nakamoto; Tetsuhiro Obana; Hirokatsu Ohhata; B. Parker; Ken-ichi Sasaki; M. Takasaki; K. Tanaka; A. Terashima; Takayuki Tomaru; P. Wanderer; Akira Yamamoto

The J-PARC Neutrino Experiment, the construction of which starts in JFY 2004, will use a superconducting magnet system for its primary proton beam line. The system, which bends the 50 GeV 0.75 MW proton beam by about 80 degrees, consists of 28 superconducting combined function magnets. The magnets utilize single layer left/right asymmetric coils that generate a dipole field of 2.6 T and a quadrupole field of 18.6 T/m with the operation current of about 7.35 kA. The system also contains a few conduction cooled superconducting corrector magnets that serve as vertical and horizontal steering magnets. All the magnets are designed to provide a physical beam aperture of 130 mm in order to achieve a large beam acceptance. Extensive care is also required to achieve safe operation with the high power proton beam. The paper summarizes the system design as well as some safety analysis results.


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

Completion of superconducting magnet production at BNL for the HERA luminosity upgrade

J. Escallier; M. Anerella; J. Cozzolino; G. Ganetis; A. Ghosh; R. Gupta; M. Harrison; A. Marone; J. Muratore; B. Parker; W. Sampson; P. Wanderer

High field common coil magnets using brittle high temperature superconductors (HTS) or Nb/sub 3/Sn cables provide new challenges with respect to the design and manufacturing of coils. We are developing the scaleable techniques that can be used in the production of common coil or other magnets with similar designs. By utilizing a cost-effective rapid turnaround short coil program, it is possible to quickly develop and test the new conductors and learn the design and manufacturing concepts needed for them. The flexible nature of a rapid turnaround program required the development of a standard coil cassette for different size cable, allowing coils to be used as building blocks for testing in different magnet configurations. Careful attention is given to the design of the coil structure: The inner bobbin the wire is wound on, the coil winding process, insulation integrity, epoxy vacuum impregnation, and final assembly into a test magnet. This paper will discuss the manufacturing techniques and design rules learned from the rapid turnaround program, and test results to date.

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P. Wanderer

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. Ghosh

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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G. Ganetis

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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J. Muratore

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. Jain

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. Marone

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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M. Anerella

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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R. Gupta

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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B. Parker

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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R. Thomas

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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