DocumentCode :
971448
Title :
Stability of the Horizontal Curvature of the LHC Cryodipoles During Cold Tests
Author :
Cano, E. D Fernandez ; Buzio, M. ; Perez, J. Garcia ; Jeanneret, B. ; Poncet, A. ; Seyvet, F. ; Tovar-Gonzalez, A. ; Wildner, E.
Author_Institution :
CERN, Geneva
Volume :
16
Issue :
2
fYear :
2006
fDate :
6/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
176
Lastpage :
179
Abstract :
The LHC will be composed of 1232 horizontally curved, 15 meter long, superconducting dipole magnets cooled at 1.9 K. They are supported within their vacuum vessel by three Glass Fiber Reinforced Epoxy (GFRE) support posts. Each cryodipole is individually cold tested at CERN before its installation and interconnection in the LHC 27 km-circumference tunnel. As the magnet geometry under cryogenic operation is extremely important for the LHC machine aperture, a new method has been developed at CERN in order to monitor the magnet curvature change between warm and cold states. It enabled us to conclude that there is no permanent horizontal curvature change of the LHC dipole magnet between warm and cold states, although a systematic horizontal transient deformation during cool-down was detected. This deformation generates loads in the dipole supporting system; further investigation permitted us to infer this behavior to the asymmetric thermal contraction of the rigid magnet thermal shield during cool-down. Controlling the helium flow rate in the thermal shield of the cryomagnet enabled us to reduce the maximal deformation by a factor of approximately two, thus increasing significantly the mechanical safety margin of the supporting system during the CERN cold tests
Keywords :
accelerator magnets; cryogenics; geometry; glass fibre reinforced composites; ion accelerators; proton accelerators; safety; storage rings; superconducting magnets; synchrotrons; 1.9 K; 27 km; CERN; GFRE; Glass Fiber Reinforced Epoxy support posts; LHC 27 km-circumference tunnel; LHC cryodipoles; LHC machine aperture; asymmetric thermal contraction; cold states; cold tests; cryogenic operation; cryomagnet; dipole supporting system; helium flow rate; horizontal curvature; magnet geometry; mechanical safety margin; rigid magnet thermal shield; superconducting accelerator magnets; vacuum vessel; warm states; Apertures; Condition monitoring; Cryogenics; Geometry; Glass; Large Hadron Collider; Optical fiber testing; Stability; Superconducting magnets; Thermal loading; Cryodipole; LHC; cryogenics; superconducting accelerator magnets;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1051-8223
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2006.870492
Filename :
1642819
Link To Document :
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