356 research outputs found

    Cryogenics, a service ? Surely you're joking !

    Get PDF

    Design, Construction, Installation and First Commissioning Results of the LHC Cryogenic System

    Get PDF
    The cryogenic system of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will be, upon its completion in 2006, the largest in the world in terms of refrigeration capacity with an equivalent to 144 kW at 4.5 K, about 400'000 litres of superfluid helium with 25 km of superconducting magnets below 2 K leading to a cryogen inventory of 100 tons of helium. The challenges involved in the design, construction and installation, as well as the first commissioning results will be addressed in this talk. Particular mention will be made of the problems encountered and how they were or are being solved. Perspectives for LHC will be presented. General considerations for future large cryogenic systems will be briefly proposed

    Upgrade of Four Cryogenic Helium Refrigerators used in the LEP Collider for LHC Refrigeration

    Get PDF
    After the final run of the Large Electron Positron Collider, the four refrigerators used for LEP were free to be used for the Large Hadron Collider project. In order to serve the LHC requirements, these four Ex-LEP refrigerators needed to be modified and upgraded. In this paper we present the requirements for these refrigerators operating for the LHC machine compared to those for LEP, the necessary modifications of the existing machinery and the additional equipment needed. We will also compare the cost of the upgrades with the cost of the new LHC refrigerators

    Cryogenic issues for LEP in 2000

    Get PDF

    Specification of Four New Large 4.5 K Helium Refrigerators for the LHC

    Get PDF
    The cooling capacity for the superconducting magnets in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics, CERN will be provided by eight helium refrigerators serving the eight 3.3 km long machine sectors. Of these eight refrigerators, four are already existing and are currently used for the Large Electron Positron Collider (LEP) project. These existing refrigerators have to be modified to serve the requirements for the LHC. Four new refrigerators providing cooling capacity down to 4.5 K will be added. All eight 4.5 K refrigerators will be completed by 1.8 K cooling stages. This presentation recalls the cryogenic architecture of the LHC, the constraints in process design resulting from it and from the desired capacity for steady state and transient operation. It then describes how these requirements were expressed in the technical specification for the four new 4.5 K refrigerators to be delivered between the years 2000 and 2002

    Towards Cost-To-Performance Optimisation of Large Superfluid Helium Refrigeration Systems

    Get PDF
    The field range of superconducting devices may be extended by lowering their operating temperature, using superfluid helium refrigeration systems which have to deliver working pressures down to 1.6 kPa. The corresponding pressure ratio can be produced by integral cold compression or using a combination of cold compressors in series together with "warm" compressors at room temperature. The optimisation of such a system depends on the number, arrangement and characteristics of cold and warm machines as well as on the operating scenario and turndown capability. The aim of this paper is to compare relative investment and operating costs of different superfluid helium cryogenic systems, with the aim of optimising their cost-to-performance ratio within the constraints of their operating scenario

    1.9 K Heat Inleak and Resistive Heating Measurements on LHC Cryomagnets

    Get PDF
    The superconducting magnets of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) distributed over eight sectors of 3.3-km long are cooled at 1.9 K in pressurized superfluid helium. During the commissioning campaign of the sectors in 2008, cold standby periods at nominal operating temperature have allowed to measure the overall static heat inleaks reaching the magnet cold masses at 1.9 K by enthalpy balance in steady-state operation. In addition, during electrical powering of the different magnet circuits, helium II calorimetry based on precision thermometry has been implemented to assess with an accuracy of 100 mW/m the additional heat loads due to resistive heating and to detect possible abnormal heat dissipation during powering. This paper describes the method applied to perform these measurements, compares the results with the expected specified values and discusses the impact of the measured values on cryo-plant tuning and operational margins

    Economics of Large Helium Cryogenic Systems: experience from Recent Projects at CERN

    Get PDF
    Large projects based on applied superconductivity, such as particle accelerators, tokamaks or SMES, require powerful and complex helium cryogenic systems, the cost of which represents a significant, if not dominant fraction of the total capital and operational expenditure. It is therefore important to establish guidelines and scaling laws for costing such systems, based on synthetic estimators of their size and performance. Although such data has already been published for many years, the experience recently gathered at CERN with the LEP and LHC projects, which have de facto turned the laboratory into a major world cryogenic center, can be exploited to update this information and broaden the range of application of the scaling laws. We report on the economics of 4.5 K and 1.8 K refrigeration, cryogen distribution and storage systems, and indicate paths towards their cost-to-performance optimisation

    Specification of Eight 2400 W @ 1.8 K Refrigeration Units for the LHC

    Get PDF
    The cooling capacity below 2 K for the superconducting magnets in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), at CERN, will be provided by eight refrigeration units at 1.8 K, each of them coupled to a 4.5 K refrigerator. Taking into account the cryogenic architecture of the LHC and corresponding process design constraints, a reference solution based on a combination of cold centrifugal and warm volumetric compressors was established in 1997. The process and technical requirements expressed in the specification issued in 1998 and the procurement scenario based on pre-series acceptance prior to final series delivery between 2002 and 2004 are presented in this paper
    • …
    corecore