Title :
Experience with the procurement of ferrite and temperature compensator for permanent magnets for accelerators
Author :
Fowler, William B. ; Brown, Bruce ; Volk, James
Author_Institution :
Fermi Nat. Accel. Lab., Batavia, IL, USA
Abstract :
The use of permanent magnets for transporting the 8 GeV proton beam from the Fermilab Booster to the new Fermilab Main Injector accelerator has been implemented and the magnets for a new 8 GeV ring to be installed in the Main Injector tunnel for increasing the luminosity of pbar/p collisions in the Tevatron are about to start being produced. Strontium oxide ferrite was selected for the magnets due to it´s low cost and satisfactory magnetic properties for the 1.5 kilogauss fields required in the 2-inch gap magnets. Fermilab has received 96,000 pounds of ferrite and by working with the Vendor (HITACHI, Edmore, MI) improved uniformity of Residual Induction (Br) has reached 3905 gauss ±0.65%. Further details are given in the paper. Overcoming the magnetic field variation when the temperature of the magnets changes is accomplished by incorporation of approximately 30% nickel steel alloy. The ferrite changes approximately-0.2% per degree C, which is compensated for by the 13% by volume of compensator alloy incorporated in the magnet. Fourteen thousand (14,000) pounds of this material has been received and in order to obtain sufficient uniformity we mixed equal amounts from each batch into each magnet. Results of this process are given in the paper
Keywords :
accelerator magnets; booster injectors; permanent magnets; proton accelerators; synchrotrons; 8 GeV; Fermilab Booster; Fermilab Main Injector accelerator; Tevatron; compensator alloy; permanent magnets; proton beam; residual induction; temperature compensator; Accelerator magnets; Colliding beam accelerators; Ferrites; Magnetic materials; Particle beams; Permanent magnets; Procurement; Proton accelerators; Strontium; Temperature;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 1997. Proceedings of the 1997
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4376-X
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.1997.753172