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Featured researches published by R. Bossert.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2006

Magnet RaD for the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP)

S.A. Gourlay; G. Ambrosio; N. Andreev; M. Anerella; E. Barzi; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; D.R. Dietderich; P. Ferracin; R. Gupta; A. Ghosh; A.R. Hafalia; C. R. Hannaford; M. Harrison; V. S. Kashikhin; V.V. Kashikhin; A.F. Lietzke; S. Mattafirri; A.D. McInturff; F. Nobrega; I. Novitsky; G. Sabbi; J. Schmazle; R. Stanek; D. Turrioni; P. Wanderer; R. Yamada; A.V. Zlobin

TUA2OR6 Magnet RD fax: 510-486-5310; e-mail: [email protected]). G. Ambrosio, N. Andreev, E. Barzi, R. Bossert, V. S. Kashikhin, V. V. Kashikhin, F. Nobrega, I. Novitsky, D. Turrioni, R. Yamada, and A.V. Zlobin are with Fermilab National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, IL 3 M. Anerella, A. Ghosh , , R. Gupta, M. Harrison, J. Schmazle, and P. Wanderer are with Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2009

Design of HQ—A High Field Large Bore

H. Felice; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; D. W. Cheng; D.R. Dietderich; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; R. Hafalia; C. R. Hannaford; Vadim V. Kashikhin; Jesse Schmalze; S. Prestemon; GianLuca Sabbi; P. Wanderer; Alexander V. Zlobin

In support of the Large Hadron Collider luminosity upgrade, a large bore (120 mm) Nb3Sn quadrupole with 15 T peak coil field is being developed within the framework of the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP). The 2-layer design with a 15 mm wide cable is aimed at pre-stress control, alignment and field quality while exploring the magnet performance limits in terms of gradient, forces and stresses. In addition, HQ will determine the magnetic, mechanical, and thermal margins of Nb3Sn technology with respect to the requirements of the luminosity upgrade at the LHC.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2014

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

P. Ferracin; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; F. Borgnolutti; R. Bossert; Daizhan Cheng; D.R. Dietderich; H. Felice; A. Ghosh; A. Godeke; S. Izquierdo Bermudez; P. Fessia; S. Krave; M. Juchno; J. C. Perez; L. Oberli; G. Sabbi; E. Todesco; M. Yu

The high luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) project is aimed at studying and implementing the necessary changes in the LHC to increase its luminosity by a factor of five. Among the magnets that will be upgraded are the 16 superconducting low-β quadrupoles placed around the two high luminosity interaction regions (ATLAS and CMS experiments). In the current baseline scenario, these quadrupole magnets will have to generate a gradient of 140 T/m in a coil aperture of 150 mm. The resulting conductor peak field of more than 12 T will require the use of Nb3Sn superconducting coils. We present in this paper the HL-LHC low-β quadrupole design, based on the experience gathered by the US LARP program, and, in particular, we describe the support structure components to pre-load the coils, withstand the electro-magnetic forces, provide alignment and LHe containment, and integrate the cold mass in the LHC IRs.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2005

Quadrupole Magnet for LARP

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 | 2009

Magnet Design of the 150 mm Aperture Low-

R. Bossert; Giorgio Ambrosio; N. Andreev; E. Barzi; G. Chlachidze; S. Feher; V. S. Kashikhin; Vadim V. Kashikhin; M.J. Lamm; A. Nobrega; I. Novitski; D. Orris; M. Tartaglia; Alexander V. Zlobin; S. Caspi; D.R. Dietderich; P. Ferracin; A.R. Hafalia; GianLuca Sabbi; A. Ghosh; P. Wanderer

In support of the development of a large-aperture Nb3Sn superconducting quadrupole for the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) luminosity upgrade, several two-layer technological quadrupole models of TQC series with 90 mm aperture and collar-based mechanical structure have been developed at Fermilab in collaboration with LBNL. This paper summarizes the results of fabrication and test of TQC02a, the second TQC model based on RRP Nb3Sn strand, and TQC02b, built with both MJR and RRP strand. The test results presented include magnet strain and quench performance during training, as well as quench studies of current ramp rate and temperature dependence from 1.9 K to 4.5 K.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2009

\beta

S. Caspi; D.R. Dietderich; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; R. Hafalia; C. R. Hannaford; A.F. Lietzke; J. Lizarazo; GianLuca Sabbi; X. Wang; A. Ghosh; P. Wanderer; Giorgio Ambrosio; E. Barzi; R. Bossert; G. Chlachidze; S. Feher; Vadim V. Kashikhin; M.J. Lamm; M. Tartaglia; Alexander V. Zlobin; M. Bajko; B. Bordini; Gijs DeRijk; C. Giloux; M. Karppinen; Juan Carlos Perez; L. Rossi; A. Siemko; E. Todesco

Amongst the magnet development program of a large-aperture Nb3Sn superconducting quadrupole for the Large Hadron Collider luminosity upgrade, six quadrupole magnets were built and tested using a shell based key and bladder technology (TQS). The 1 m long 90 mm aperture magnets are part of the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) aimed at demonstrating Nb3Sn technology by the year 2009, of a 3.6 m long magnet capable of achieving 200 T/m. In support of the LARP program the TQS magnets were tested at three different laboratories, LBNL, FNAL and CERN and while at CERN a technology-transfer and a four days magnet disassembly and reassembly were included. This paper summarizes the fabrication, assembly, cool-down and test results of the six magnets and compares measurements with design expectations.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2011

Quadrupoles for the High Luminosity LHC

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 | 2010

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

S. Caspi; G. Ambrosio; M. Anerella; E. Barzi; R. Bossert; D. W. Cheng; D.R. Dietderich; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; R. Hafalia; R. Hannaford; V.V. Kashikhin; D. Pasholk; G. Sabbi; J. Schmalzle; P. Wanderer; A.V. Zlobin

Future upgrades to machines like the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN will push accelerator magnets beyond 10 T forcing the replacement of NbTi superconductors with advanced superconductors such as Nb3Sn. In support of the LHC Phase-II upgrade, the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) is developing a large bore (120 mm) Nb3Sn Interaction Region (IR) quadrupole (HQ) capable of reaching 15 T at its conductor limit and gradients of 199 T/m at 4.4 K and 219 T/m at 1.9 K. The 1 m long, two-layer magnet, addresses coil alignment and accelerator quality features while exploring the magnet performance limits in terms of gradient, stress and structure. This paper summarizes and reports on the design, mechanical structure, coil windings, reaction and impregnation processes.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2007

Fabrication and Test of LARP Technological Quadrupole Models of TQC Series

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 | 2013

Test Results of LARP Nb3Sn Quadrupole Magnets Using a Shell-based Support Structure (TQS)

A.V. Zlobin; N. Andreev; Giorgio Apollinari; Bernhard Auchmann; E. Barzi; R. Bossert; G. Chlachidze; M. Karppinen; F. Nobrega; I. Novitski; L. Rossi; D. Smekens; D. Turrioni; Ryota Yamada

The upgrade of the LHC collimation system foresees installation of additional collimators around the LHC ring. The longitudinal space for the collimators could be provided by replacing some 8.33 T NbTi LHC main dipoles with shorter 11 T Nb3Sn dipoles compatible with the LHC lattice and main systems. To demonstrate this possibility, FNAL and CERN have started a joint program with the goal of building a 5.5 m long twin-aperture dipole prototype suitable for installation in the LHC. The first step of this program is the development of a 2 m long single-aperture demonstrator dipole with a nominal field of 11 T at the LHC nominal current of 11.85 kA and ~ 20% margin. This paper describes the design, construction, and test results of the first single-aperture Nb3Sn demonstrator dipole model.

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A. Ghosh

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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S. Caspi

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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