Title :
Automated permanent magnet magnetization system for 8 GeV transfer line and recycler ring production at Fermilab
Author_Institution :
Fermi Nat. Accel. Lab., Batavia, IL, USA
Abstract :
The Recycler antiproton storage ring and the 8 GeV beam transfer line between the Fermilab Booster and the Main Injector are constructed using permanent magnet ferrite bricks surrounding a steel pole and housed inside a steel flux return shell. The transfer line consists of 51 dipoles, 67 gradient magnets, and 8 quadrupoles. The Recycler ring consists of approximately 350 gradient magnets and 60 quadrupoles. These magnet assemblies are being produced at Fermilab currently and as a part of the tooling required to produce these assemblies we have designed, built and put into production an automated permanent magnet magnetization system. The system includes a conventional B-2 type dipole, a programmable logic controller (PLC) controlled brick mover, a Hall-probe measurement station and an IBM Compatible PC for data acquisition. The system has been used in the production of the 8 GeV beam transfer line magnet assemblies each requiring several hundred individual permanent magnets. This paper describes and illustrates the design of the automated system, the data acquisition, use of FEA analysis in the design, and the experience we have had using this production system
Keywords :
accelerator magnets; data acquisition; high energy physics instrumentation computing; magnetisation; permanent magnets; programmable controllers; proton accelerators; storage rings; 8 GeV transfer line; Fermilab Booster; Hall-probe; Main Injector; data acquisition; dipoles; ferrite; gradient magnets; magnetization system; permanent magnet; programmable logic controller; quadrupoles; recycler ring; Assembly systems; Data acquisition; Ferrites; Magnetization; Permanent magnets; Production systems; Programmable control; Steel; Storage rings; Structural beams;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 1997. Proceedings of the 1997
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4376-X
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.1997.753176