학술논문

Conceptual Design of Superbend and Hardbend Magnets for Advance Light Source Upgrade Project
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity IEEE Trans. Appl. Supercond. Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on. 30(4):1-5 Jun, 2020
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Superconducting magnets
Magnetomechanical effects
Coils
Magnetic shielding
Magnetic noise
Saturation magnetization
Niobium-tin
Accelerator dipole
permanent magnets
superconducting magnets
Language
ISSN
1051-8223
1558-2515
2378-7074
Abstract
ALS-U is an ongoing upgrade of the Advance Light Source (ALS) at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBL). The upgraded ring of the ALS will use a multi-bend-archomat (MBA) lattice, which will allow increasing the brightness of soft x-ray sources 2-3 orders of magnitude with respect to current ALS ca-pabilities. One of the goals of the project is maintaining support for existing x-ray beamlines with useful intensity around 12.5 keV, which are used for a macromolecular crystallography. The medium energy x-ray source points will be provided by replacing six gradient-dipole magnets of the upgraded ring with high-field magnets generating a higher peak field at the source point. Two defocusing quadrupoles will be installed together with each high-field magnet in order to match the quadrupole field component of removed gradient dipole. Two alternative designs were investigated. The first design is a warm-bore superconducting magnet. Its coils are made of an internally reinforced bronze-route Nb 3 Sn wire and a holmium pole is used as a flux concentrator. The second option is NdFeB permanent magnet system with build-in field clamps. Due to limited space in the accelerator lattice and the magnetic field requirements for the x-ray source points, both designs present challenges due to high magnetic forces acting on the magnet components and due to impact of the magnet cross-talk on the beam trajectory.