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Leaders in High Temperature Superconductivity
Public-Private Collaborations Win Superconductor Industry Awards
-- CERN's Large Hadron Collider Current
Leads Project Head Amalia Ballarino Named Superconductor Industry Person
of the Year 2006
-- Former High Temperature Superconductivity Program Manager at the U.S.
Department of Energy James Daley Wins Lifetime Achievement Award
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PORTLAND, OR -- May 21, 2007 --
Superconductors are at the heart of several large
and rapidly growing industries, ranging from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to
fusion energy research. Superconductors, which can transmit electricity with
zero losses, may soon revolutionize other industries as well, including electric
power, communications, computing, nanotechnology, and transportation. Superconductor
Week, the leading publication on superconductor business and technology,
today calls attention to two leaders at the forefront of the global
superconductor industry.
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Dr. Amalia Ballarino
Superconductor Industry Person of the Year |
Dr. James Daley
Superconductor Industry Lifetime Achievement |
The award for “Superconductor
Industry Person of the Year,” the industry's most prestigious international
award in the development and commercialization of superconductors, has been
bestowed upon Amalia Ballarino, Project Leader for the high temperature
superconducting (HTS) current leads for the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, a
particle accelerator designed to probe the limits of physics and expand our
understanding of the universe. James Daley, recently retired from Program
Manager of the HTS program at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), was
recognized for his career accomplishments with the Lifetime Achievement Award.
The awards were determined by a
panel of recognized leaders in science, R&D, and government in North America,
Europe, and Asia. The winners were selected from dozens of nominations
submitted by peers around the world from every field of superconductivity.
Ballarino Herlalds
Commercialization of HTS
More than 1,000 HTS leads
transfer about 3MA of current from the room-temperature converters to the
thousands of superconducting magnets in the LHC’s accelerator ring at CERN. As
Project Manager, Ballarino has been responsible for the leads from the initial
materials testing and selection, through the conceptual and detailed engineering
design of the leads, to the collaboration with industry and laboratory for
manufacturing and testing of the final series production.
Mark Bitterman, Executive
Editor at Superconductor Week, commented, “With 99% of all the LHC current leads
completing delivery and successful testing in 2006, it is appropriate to
recognize Ballarino’s work, which represents the largest commercial use of HTS
wire in the world, with an impact extending far beyond CERN.”
The LHC’s massive
superconducting magnets are refrigerated with supercooled liquid helium to a
temperature colder than outer space (1.9 K, or ‑271°C) in order to achieve their
extremely high performance ratings. Bringing electrical current from the room
temperature power system into this extremely frigid environment poses the
engineering challenge of how to transport large amounts of electricity without
introducing large amounts of heat generated by resistance in the wiring or
conducted from outside. HTS materials, which conduct electricity at somewhat
higher temperatures, and which also have low thermal conductivity, limit the
amount of heat that is transferred into the cryogenic environment, and
significantly reduce the cooling requirements of the accelerating rings. In the
case of the LHC, using HTS leads reduced the heat load into the liquid helium
environment by a factor greater than ten.
Ken Marken,
Deputy Center Leader of the
Superconducting Technology Center at Los Alamos National Lab, commented: “Ballarino is
responsible to a very great extent for the success of the LHC HTS leads, which
have now been used in a range of commercial and scientific applications
including other HEP installations, conduction cooled LTS and HTS magnets for a
variety of applications, and MRI magnets.”
Jurgen Kellers and Jens Müller of Trithor GmBh
commented: “The first truly commercial application of HTS is current leads.
Whether it be for small magnets, or for large systems in high energy physics,
HTS current leads now come first to the mind of the user when he or she is about
to plan a magnet system.”
Dr. Ballarino received a
Master’s Degree and Ph.D in Nuclear Engineering from the prestigious Politecnico
di Torino, Torino, Italy. Her Ph.D work was done at CERN, where she has been
employed since 1997. More about
Amalia Ballarino >>
Daley Establishes Global
Model for Public-Private Collaboration on HTS
Dr. James Daley, who retired at
the end of 2006, receives the Superconductor Industry Lifetime Achievement Award
for his decades of leadership at the DOE, where programs he implemented have
been key to the collaborations between business and government that make the HTS
program so successful.
“Dr. Daley
has provided strong leadership to the DOE’s HTS Program in the Office of
Electricity for almost two decades," Bitterman commented. "He is recognized as a champion of
cooperative partnerships between government and industry, and for his strong
support for research and development -- his advocacy led to 90 collaborative
projects between industry and national laboratories. Dr. Daley is also noted
for his leadership at a series of HTS Wire Development Workshops, which led to
technological advances in conductors."
Bob Hawsey, Director of the
Energy Efficiency, Renewable Energy, and Electricity Delivery Program at Oak
Ridge National Laboratory, commented, “Before Jim Daley came to Washington there
was no standardized mechanism for industrial collaboration with the DOE national
laboratories. Jim’s program piloted what has now become commonplace across the
agency--the Cooperative Research and Development Agreement. In addition, Daley
initiated a new tool to accelerate development of electric power applications of HTS: the Superconductivity Partnerships with Industry Program. These
partnerships, along with the new peer-review mechanism first adopted by Jim
Daley, helped keep the U.S. program in a leadership position in the world-wide
race to commercialize HTS.”
Dr. Daley was manager of the
High Temperature Superconductivity Program since the program’s inception in the
late 1980’s. Before joining the DOE, Dr. Daley was a staff scientist at Argonne
National Laboratory for 15 years, performing research in a variety of fields
that included nuclear energy, advanced heat engines, and electric utility
storage systems. More about Jim Daley >>
About the Awards
The winners of Superconductor Week's Superconductor Industry Awards were determined by a panel of nine leading experts in science and industry from around the world working in every field of superconductivity.
Click here for more information: On the Panel
- On the Awards - On
Superconductors.
Last year's winners were
Yuh Shiohara of the International Superconductivity
Technology Center (ISTEC) and
Seung Hong of Oxford Instruments
Superconducting Technology.
Founded in 1987, Superconductor Week is the leading provider of critical
information and expert insight for the technology and business of
superconductivity. Original reporting, exclusive interviews, and expert analysis
cover medical, electric power, communications, military, basic science,
nanotechnology, and other markets. For more information please visit
www.superconductorweek.com.
The award's official plaques will be presented to the winners at the 20th
International Conference on Magnet Technology (MT20)
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the
DOE Superconductivity for Electric Systems Peer Review in Crystal
City, Virginia, and at the 8th European Conference on Applied Superconductivity
(EUCAS 2007) in Brussels,
Belgium.
For more information, email
service@superconductorweek.com.
Download a
copy of this release in PDF format
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"Superconductor Week
has a three-fold
mission:
to advance the goals of our readers
by a critical
perspective on low- and high- Tc superconductors and cryogenics; to promote the
industry by spreading information and insight to the broadest possible audience;
and to provide
a platform for the free exchange of ideas and news within the
superconductivity community."
-- Mark Bitterman
Executive Editor |
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