Abstract

Resin-impregnated high-field Nb3Sn type of accelerator magnets are known to require extensive training campaigns and even may exhibit performance-limiting defects after thermal or electromagnetic cycling. In order to efficiently explore technological solutions for this behaviour and assess a wide variety of impregnation material combinations and surface treatments, the BOnding eXperiment (BOX) sample was developed. BOX provides a short-sample test platform featuring magnet-relevant Lorentz forces and exhibits associated training. Here we report on the comparative behaviour of BOX samples comprising the same Nb3Sn Rutherford cable but impregnated either with common resins used in high-field magnets, or with less conventional paraffin wax. Remarkably, the two paraffin wax-impregnated BOX samples reached their critical current without training and are also resilient to thermal and mechanical cycling. These rather encouraging results strongly contrast to those obtained with resin impregnated samples, which show the characteristic extensive training and at best barely reach their critical current value.

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