30 research outputs found

    Results on the FCC-hh Beam Screen Sawtooth at the Kit Electron Storage Ring Kara

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    In the framework of the EuroCirCol collaboration [1] (work package 4 "Cryogenic Beam Vacuum System"), the fabrication of the FCC-hh beam screen (BS) prototype has been carried out with the aim of testing it at room temperature on the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) 2.5 GeV electron storage ring KARA (KArlsruhe Research Accelerator) light source. The BS prototype was tested on a beamline installed by the collaboration, named as BEam Screen TEstbench EXperiment (BESTEX). KARA has been chosen because its synchrotron radiation (SR) spectrum, photon flux and power match quite well the one foreseen for the 50+50 TeV FCC-hh proton collider. The BS prototype (2 m in length) was manufactured according to the base line design (BD) of the FCC-hh BS. It implements a saw-tooth profile designed to absorb the SR generated at the bending magnets. Also, a laser-ablated anti-electron cloud surface texturing [2] was applied at the BS inner walls. We present here the results obtained at BESTEX and the comparison of the results obtained during irradiation of the saw-tooth profile at different geometric configurations

    HL-LHC beam screen

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    The first set of images shows the Q2 magnet type of the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) beam screen pre-assembly of pre-serie. Two images show the HL-LHC beam screen pre-assembly on the metrology bench. And finally, the preparation of the cooling tubes for cleaning

    Conceptual Design of the Vacuum System for the Future Circular Collider FCC-ee Main Rings

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    The Future Circular Collider study program comprises several machine concepts for the future of high-energy particle physics. Among them there is a twin-ring e⁻eâș collider capable to run at beam energies between 45.6 and 182.5 GeV, i.e. the energies corresponding to the resonances of the Z, W, H bosons and the top quark. The conceptual design of the two 100-km rings has advanced to what is believed to be a working solution, i.e. capability to deal with low-energy (45.6 GeV) high-current (1390 mA) version as well as the high-energy (182.5 GeV) low-current (5.4 mA) one, with intermediate energy and current steps for the other 2 resonances. The limit for all of the versions is given by the 50 MW/beam allotted to the synchrotron radiation (SR) losses. The paper will outline the main beam/machine parameters, the vacuum requirements, and the choices made concerning the vacuum chamber geometry, material, surface treatments, pumping system, and the related pressure profiles. The location of lumped SR photon absorbers for the generic arc cell has been determined. An outline of the studies needed and envisaged for the near future will also be given

    Design of the vacuum system of the FCC-ee electron-positron collider

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    The Future Circular Collider (FCC) Design Study includes a high-luminosity, low-emittance, two-ring storage ring (FCC-ee) where electrons and positrons are stored and made to collide inside two detectors. The vacuum system of FCC-ee must be designed in order to deal with a lower-energy (45.6 GeV), high-current (1390 mA) Z-pole machine and at a final stage with a higher-energy (175-182.5 GeV) low-current (6.4-5.4 mA). Two intermediate energies are also envisioned. The lower-energy machine turns out to be the most challenging one from the point of view of vacuum, since the photon-stimulated desorption (PSD) generated by the copious synchrotron radiation (SR) fans is quite large. Optimization of the pressure profiles has been carried out by means of extensive coupled monte-carlo simulations and optimization, for SR and molecular flow. For the higher energy versions of the machine, for which the SR spectra are characterized by critical energies well above the Compton edge, the localized absorbers facilitate also shielding the tunnel and any radiation-sensitive machine components from scattered gamma-ray photon damage, by installing short high-Z shielding material around the absorbers

    Combined model of strain-induced phase transformation and orthotropic damage in ductile materials at cryogenic temperatures

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    Ductile materials (like stainless steel or copper) show at cryogenic temperatures three principal phenomena: serrated yielding (discontinuous in terms of dsigma/depsilon), plastic strain-induced phase transformations and evolution of ductile damage. The present paper deals exclusively with the two latter cases. Thus, it is assumed that the plastic flow is perfectly smooth. Both in the case of damage evolution and for the gamma-alpha prime phase transformation, the principal mechanism is related to the formation of plastic strain fields. In the constitutive modeling of both phenomena, a crucial role is played by the accumulated plastic strain, expressed by the Odqvist parameter p. Following the general trends, both in the literature concerning the phase transformation and the ductile damage, it is assumed that the rate of transformation and the rate of damage are proportional to the accumulated plastic strain rate. The gamma-alpha prime phase transformation converts the initially homogenous material to a two-phase heterogeneous "composite ". The kinetics of phase transformation is described by the relevant linearized law of evolution of the volume fraction of alpha prime martensite in the austenitic gamma matrix left bracket Garion, C. and Skoczen, B. (2002a). The evolution of orthotropic damage is characterized by the fact that the principal directions of damage are generally not colinear with the principal directions of stress. The damage rate tensor depends linearly on the strain energy density release rate tensor (conjugate force) and on the material properties tensor C, that reflects the orthotropy level. The relevant kinetic law of damage evolution and the combined constitutive model, including phase transformation, are developed in the present paper. The model is particularly suitable to describe the evolution of highly localized damage fields in thin-walled shells, subjected at cryogenic temperatures to the loads far beyond the yield point. It has been applied to the prediction of the response of the belows expansion joints (corrugated thin-walled shells) designed for the interconnections of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN
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