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Ponce, L.

Paper Title Page
WEPD028 Performance of the Superconducting Corrector Magnet Circuits during the Commissioning of the LHC 2470
 
  • W. Venturini Delsolaro, V. Baggiolini, A. Ballarino, B. Bellesia, F. Bordry, A. Cantone, M. P. Casas Lino, C. CastilloTrello, N. Catalan-Lasheras, Z. Charifoulline, C. Charrondiere, G. D'Angelo, K. Dahlerup-Petersen, G. De Rijk, R. Denz, M. Gruwe, V. Kain, M. Karppinen, B. Khomenko, G. Kirby, S. L.N. Le Naour, A. Macpherson, A. Marqueta Barbero, K. H. Mess, M. Modena, R. Mompo, V. Montabonnet, D. Nisbet, V. Parma, M. Pojer, L. Ponce, A. Raimondo, S. Redaelli, V. Remondino, H. Reymond, A. Rijllart, R. I. Saban, S. Sanfilippo, K. M. Schirm, R. Schmidt, A. P. Siemko, M. Solfaroli Camillocci, H. Thiesen, Y. Thurel, A. Vergara-Fernández, A. P. Verweij, R. Wolf, M. Zerlauth
    CERN, Geneva
  • A. Castaneda, I. Romera Ramirez
    CIEMAT, Madrid
  • SF. Feher, R. H. Flora
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
 
  The LHC is a complex machine requiring more than 7400 superconducting corrector magnets distributed along a circumference of 26.7 km. These magnets are powered in 1380 different electrical circuits with currents ranging from 60 A up to 600 A. Among the corrector circuits the 600 A corrector magnets form the most diverse and differentiated magnet circuits. About 60000 high current connections had to be made. A minor fault in a circuit or one of the superconducting connections would have severe consequences for the accelerator operation. All magnets are wound from various types of Nb-Ti superconducting strands, and many contain resistors to by-pass the current in case of the transition to the normal conducting state in case of a quench, and hence reduce the hot spot temperature. In this paper the performance of these magnet circuits is presented, focussing on the quench current and quench behaviour of the magnets. Quench detection and the performance of the electrical interconnects will be dealt with. The results as measured on the entire circuits will be compared to the test results obtained during the reception tests of the individual magnets.  
WEPD029 Performance of the Main Dipole Magnet Circuits of the LHC during Commissioning 2473
 
  • A. P. Verweij, V. Baggiolini, A. Ballarino, B. Bellesia, F. Bordry, A. Cantone, M. P. Casas Lino, A. Castaneda, C. CastilloTrello, N. Catalan-Lasheras, Z. Charifoulline, G.-J. Coelingh, G. D'Angelo, K. Dahlerup-Petersen, G. De Rijk, R. Denz, M. Gruwe, V. Kain, B. Khomenko, G. Kirby, S. L.N. Le Naour, A. Macpherson, A. Marqueta Barbero, K. H. Mess, M. Modena, R. Mompo, V. Montabonnet, D. Nisbet, V. Parma, M. Pojer, L. Ponce, A. Raimondo, S. Redaelli, H. Reymond, D. Richter, A. Rijllart, I. Romera, R. I. Saban, S. Sanfilippo, R. Schmidt, A. P. Siemko, M. Solfaroli Camillocci, H. Thiesen, Y. Thurel, W. Venturini Delsolaro, A. Vergara-Fernández, R. Wolf, M. Zerlauth
    CERN, Geneva
  • SF. Feher, R. H. Flora
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
 
  During hardware commissioning of the Large Hadron Collider, 8 main dipole circuits and 16 main quadrupole circuits are tested at 1.9 K and up to their nominal current. Each dipole circuit contains 154 magnets of 15 m length, and has a total stored energy of up to 1.1 GJ. Each quadrupole circuit contains 47 or 51 magnets of 5.4 m length, and has a total stored energy of up to 20 MJ. All magnets are wound from Nb-Ti superconducting Rutherford cables, and contain heaters to quickly force the transition to the normal conducting state in case of a quench, and hence reduce the hot spot temperature. In this paper the performance of these circuits is presented, focusing on the quench current and quench behaviour of the magnets. Quench detection, heater performance, operation of the cold bypass diodes, cryogenic recovery time, electrical joints, and possible magnet-to-magnet quench propagation will be dealt with. The results as measured on the entire circuits will be compared to the test results obtained during the reception tests of the individual magnets.  
THPC147 Generation of 1.5 Million Beam Loss Threshold Values 3333
 
  • E. B. Holzer, B. Dehning, L. Ponce, M. Sapinski, M. Stockner
    CERN, Geneva
  • D. K. Kramer
    TUL, Liberec
  • P. Priebe
    Poznan University of Technology, Poznan
 
  CERN's Large Hadron Collider will store an unprecedented amount of energy in its circulating beams. Beam-loss monitoring (BLM) is, therefore, critical for machine protection. It must protect against the consequences (equipment damage, quenches of superconducting magnets) of excessive beam loss. 4000 monitors will be installed at critical loss locations. Each monitor has 384 beam abort thresholds associated; for 12 integrated loss durations (40 us to 83 s) and 32 energies (450 GeV to 7 TeV). Depending on monitor location, the thresholds vary by orders of magnitude. For simplification, the monitors are grouped in 'families'. Monitors of one family have the same thresholds at start-up; they protect similar magnets against equivalent loss scenarios. The start-up calibration of the BLM system is required to be within a factor of five in accuracy; and the final accuracy should be a factor of two. Simulations (backed-up by control measurements) determine the relation between the BLM signal, the deposited energy and the critical energy deposition for damage or quench (temperature of the coil). The paper presents the details and systematic of determining 1.5 million threshold values.