Title :
A Nb-Ti 90 mm Double-Aperture Quadrupole for the High Luminosity LHC Upgrade
Author :
Segreti, M. ; Rifflet, J.M. ; Todesco, E.
Author_Institution :
CEA-Saclay, DSM/IRFU/SACM, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
Abstract :
The luminosity upgrade of the LHC requires replacing the magnets around the ATLAS and CMS experiments with larger aperture dipoles, quadrupoles and correctors. The goal is to have a magnetic lattice that can allow to halve the beam size in the collision points with respect to present baseline. Within the framework of HiLumi LHC, CEA-Saclay studied the replacement of the 70-mm double aperture quadrupole Q4, with a 90-mm magnet based on Nb-Ti technology. The main challenges are due to the distance between the beams of 194 mm, giving a non-negligible magnetic coupling between the two apertures. The coil chosen to be the baseline is a single layer with 15-mm-width cable of the LHC MQ quadrupole. The mechanical structure is based on stainless steel collars to withstand the Lorentz forces. The iron yoke has a magnetic function, and guarantees the alignment of the two apertures. Electromagnetic and mechanical aspects and effects of unbalanced regimes on the field quality have been analyzed. A 3-D design of the coil ends is obtained by minimizing both the integrated multipoles and the peak field.
Keywords :
accelerator magnets; linear colliders; niobium alloys; stainless steel; superconducting magnets; titanium alloys; type II superconductors; 3-D design; CEA-Saclay; HiLumi LHC; Lorentz forces; Nb-Ti; Nb-Ti technology; beam size; coil; collision points; double-aperture quadrupole; electromagnetic aspects; high luminosity LHC upgrade; iron yoke; magnetic function; magnetic lattice; mechanical aspects; mechanical structure; nonnegligible magnetic coupling; size 90 mm to 15 mm; stainless steel collars; Apertures; Coils; Heating; Insulation; Large Hadron Collider; Resistors; Superconducting magnets; Dipoles; dipoles; low-temperature superconductors; quadrupoles; superconducting accelerator magnets;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2014.2366517