19–24 May 2024
Music City Center
US/Central timezone

Optimization studies on accelerator sample components for energy management purposes

WEPS79
22 May 2024, 16:00
2h
Blues (MCC Exhibit Hall A)

Blues

MCC Exhibit Hall A

Poster Presentation MC7.T10 Superconducting Magnets Wednesday Poster Session

Speaker

Falastine Abusaif (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)

Description

The large amount of energy required to operate large-scale facilities with particle accelerators within has been considered as one of the important research topics over the past years. This sheds light on the importance of the research field of energy management that entitles, with a view to long-term operations, the implementation of smart and sustainable technologies.
One of the key technologies in accelerators are superconductor (SC)-based designs. The vanishing electrical resistance together with the ability to provide field values well above those from conventional conductors is the main motivation behind exploiting superconducting wires in building coils and magnets for large-scale accelerators. However, these superconductors can also quench under certain conditions, driving the wires into the normal state and potentially allowing for overheating and destruction of the conductor material and/or the whole design.
This work will present the results of optimization-based analyses performed on accelerator SC-sample components aiming at goal designs that are more energy efficient at a reference operational field or current. A compromise between getting the best performance for excellent science from a design (with superconductivity preserved and safe operation maintained) and reducing its power consumption (and eventually its effective cost) will be addressed too.

Region represented Europe
Paper preparation format LaTeX

Primary author

Falastine Abusaif (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)

Co-authors

Andreas Grau (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Anke-Susanne Mueller (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Dr Bennet Krasch (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) David Saez de Jauregui (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Erik Bruendermann (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Giovanni De Carne (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.