2021 All Engineers Retreat

US/Central
Virtual

Virtual

Allen Schmitt (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory), Christopher Mossey (FNAL), Cindy Joe (Fermilab ND/Operations), Daniil Frolov (Fermilab), Gary Drake, Luke Martin, Mark Jeffers (FNAL), Paul Czarapata (FNAL), Roza Doubnik (mechanical engineer), Ryan Rivera (FNAL), Sai Manohari Kancharla, Silvia Zorzetti (Fermilab), Victor Grzelak
Description

National Engineers Week was established in 1951 by the National Society of Professional Engineers in conjunction with President George Washington's birthday. Today, it is observed by more than 70 engineering, education, and cultural societies, and more than 50 corporations and government agencies. The purpose of National Engineers Week is to call attention to the contributions to society that engineers make.

This year in that same spirit, the EAC is sponsoring a series of events to highlight Fermilab’s own engineering community. The primary goals of these events are the following :  to increase awareness of current active initiatives at the lab, to facilitate professional networking within the lab, and to provide training of common tools by leveraging internal subject matters experts.

    • Annual Plenary
      • 1
        Welcome
        Speakers: Christopher Mossey (FNAL), Paul Czarapata (FNAL), Dr Silvia Zorzetti (Fermilab)
      • 2
        Address to Engineering Community
        Speaker: Nigel Lockyer (Fermilab)
      • 3
        Quantum Computing at Fermilab
        Speaker: Anna Grassellino (Fermilab)
      • 4
        LDRD
        Speaker: Dr Robert Tschirhart (Fermilab)
    • Keynote: Manipulating the quantum state of microwave photons in multimode cavities

      Multimode cavity quantum electrodynamics ---where a two-level system interacts simultaneously with many cavity modes---provides a versatile framework for quantum information processing and quantum optics. Due to the combination of long coherence times and large interaction strengths, one of the leading experimental platforms for cavity QED involves coupling a superconducting circuit to a 3D microwave cavity. In this work, we realize a 3D multimode circuit QED system with single photon lifetime of 2 ms and cooperativities of 0.5−1.5×1e9 across 9 modes of a novel seamless cavity. We demonstrate a variety of protocols for universal single-mode quantum control applicable across all cavity modes, using only a single drive line. We achieve this by developing a straightforward flute method for creating monolithic superconducting microwave cavities that reduces loss while simultaneously allowing control of the mode spectrum and mode-qubit interaction. We highlight the flexibility and ease of implementation of this technique by using it to fabricate a variety of 3D cavity geometries, providing a template for engineering multimode quantum systems with exceptionally low dissipation. This work is an important step towards realizing hardware efficient random access quantum memories and processors, and for exploring quantum many-body physics with photons.

      Convener: Prof. David Schuster (University of Chicago)
      • 5
        Manipulating the quantum state of microwave photons in multimode cavities
        Speaker: Prof. David Schuster (University of Chicago)
    • Opportunities for the Fermilab Engineering Community

      A place to exchange ideas for the Engineering Community

      Conveners: Gary Drake, Paul Czarapata (FNAL)
      • 6
        Opportunities for the Fermilab Engineering Community

        A place to exchange ideas for the Engineering Community

        Speakers: Gary Drake, Paul Czarapata (FNAL)
    • FPGA Development at Fermilab

      The purpose of this session is to provide a forum to raise awareness, introduce, and communicate about Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) and, in general, real-time control and processing activities in which Fermilab engineers are participating. Example activities to be discussed might include small- and large-scale trigger, timing distribution and synchronization, event building, event processing, artificial intelligence, machine learning, feedback control loops, visualization, internet-of-things, and detector readout. Please join us as we share ideas as to how to get started with FPGAs, improve our workflows, and target future opportunities.

      Convener: Ryan Rivera (FNAL)
      • 7
        FPGA Development at Fermilab

        The purpose of this session is to provide a forum to raise awareness, introduce, and communicate about Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) and, in general, real-time control and processing activities in which Fermilab engineers are participating. Example activities to be discussed might include small- and large-scale trigger, timing distribution and synchronization, event building, event processing, artificial intelligence, machine learning, feedback control loops, visualization, internet-of-things, and detector readout. Please join us as we share ideas as to how to get started with FPGAs, improve our workflows, and target future opportunities.

        Speaker: Ryan Rivera (FNAL)
    • R&D Engineering Projects at Fermilab

      A room to talk about R&D engineering projects at Fermilab, find synergies and talk about funding opportunities.

      Conveners: Cristian Boffo, Dr Silvia Zorzetti (Fermilab)
      • 8
        R&D Engineering Projects at Fermilab

        A room to talk about R&D engineering projects at Fermilab, find synergies and talk about funding opportunities.

        Speakers: Cristian Boffo, Dr Robert Tschirhart (Fermilab), Dr Silvia Zorzetti (Fermilab)
    • Keynote: SPARC and the pathway to high-field fusion

      Brandon Sorbom, Chief Science Officer, Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS)

      MIT, Ph.D., Nuclear Science and Engineering (2017)
      Loyola Marymount University, B.S., Electrical Engineering, Engineering Physics (2010)
      MIT PSFC researcher since 2010

      Brandon’s expertise is in fusion energy, compact power plant design and high temperature superconductors. During his doctoral work at MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center, Brandon was the leader of the ARC Reactor design study, a conceptual design for a small, modular fusion pilot plant that formed the basis for a comprehensive high-field pathway to commercial fusion energy. As CSO of CFS, Brandon leads the work in evaluating high temperature superconductor performance and prospects for scale-up, as well as leading the power plant design scoping efforts.

      MIT and Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS), a new startup company focused on the rapid commercialization of fusion, are jointly pursuing a privately-funded, accelerated approach to demonstrate the feasibility of fusion energy. The CFS/MIT team is currently developing a new generation of high-field, large-bore, REBCO-based superconducting magnets to incorporate into a compact net-energy tokamak called SPARC that will demonstrate net fusion energy gain. The key performance metrics in a tokamak scale as the strength of the toroidal magnetic field to the third or fourth power times the volume of the device. One of the most important consequences of these scalings is that increasing the magnetic field in a tokamak enables a much smaller device to demonstrate net-energy production, leading to dramatic reductions in cost, timeline, and organizational complexity required to construct and operate the fusion device. Over the past two and a half years, the SPARC team has performed much of the groundwork to prove out the magnet technology that will be used in SPARC in addition to designing the fusion device itself. On the technical side, the team has collaborated with HTS centers of excellence to evaluate/improve the performance of REBCO from leading manufacturers, designed and built our own HTS measurement facilities, and performed several cable-level tests both in-house and at external facilities. On the programmatic side, we have raised $215M of private capital, grown a combined MIT/CFS team of over 200 people working on the SPARC effort, built magnet development, construction, and testing spaces at both MIT and CFS facilities, and received orders for several hundred km of REBCO coated conductor. This talk will present a summary of the work above and discuss plans for the future.

      • 9
        SPARC and the pathway to high-field fusion
        Speaker: Dr Brandon Sorbom (Commonwealth Fusion Systems)
    • Annual Plenary
      Convener: Paul Czarapata (FNAL)
      • 10
        Fermilab Affiliated Organizations and Societies
        Speaker: Mark Jeffers (FNAL)
      • 11
        IERC Project
        Speakers: Brian Rubik (Fermilab), Leo Bellantoni (FNAL)
      • 10:40
        Break
      • 12
        Fermilab D&I Efforts
        Speaker: Sandra Charles (Fermilab)
      • 13
        Fermilab Concerns Reporting System
        Speaker: Deanne Randich (FNAL)
      • 14
        Report from Breakout Room
        Speakers: Ryan Rivera (FNAL), Dr Silvia Zorzetti (Fermilab)
      • 15
        Report from Breakout Room
        Speaker: Paul Czarapata (FNAL)
    • Inventor Recognition Ceremony

      Please join us for a brief ceremony celebrating innovation at Fermilab and honoring more than 30 individuals who received patents or filed Records of Invention during calendar year 2020. The ceremony will be held on Thursday, February 25, at 2 PM. The event is open to all interested employees.

      If you would like to help us celebrate, please register at https://indico.fnal.gov/e/airc2021.

      Convener: Cherri Schmidt (Fermilab)
      • 27
        Inventor Recognition Ceremony
    • Virtual Tour of Icarus

      We will cover several aspects of the various subsystems of the experiment, as well as the electrical and cryogenic systems that support it.

      • 28
        Virtual Tour of Icarus
        Speakers: Angela Fava (Fermilab), Dr Roza Doubnik (mechanical engineer), Trevor Nichols (Fermilab)
    • PIP2IT RF Virtual Tour

      The PIP-II Injector Test (PIP2IT) is an accelerator test facility for the upcoming PIP-II Project. The accelerator is used for beam commissioning and testing of PIP-II RF cavities, magnets, electronics and instrumentation. The tour will focus on the accelerating RF structures, and will involve video and photos of the accelerator in its current state.

      • 29
        PIP2IT RF Virtual Tour
        Speaker: Victor Grzelak
    • Virtual Tour of Quantum Computing Lab

      During this tour will talk about quantum computing efforts at Fermilab and strong synergies with particle accelerators’ technology. We will show advanced measurements and controls techniques to calibrate and characterize superconducting qubits.

      • 30
        Virtual Tour of Quantum Computing Lab
        Speakers: Dr Daniil Frolov (Fermilab), Dr Silvia Zorzetti (Fermilab)