405 research outputs found
Design and operation of the air-cooled beam dump for the extraction line of CERN's Proton Synchrotron Booster (PSB)
A new beam dump has been designed, built, installed and operated to withstand
the future proton beam extracted from the Proton Synchrotron Booster (PSB) in
the framework of the LHC Injector Upgrade (LIU) Project at CERN, consisting of
up to 1E14 protons per pulse at 2 GeV, foreseen after the machine upgrades
planned for CERN's Long Shutdown 2 (2019-2020). In order to be able to
efficiently dissipate the heat deposited by the primary beam, the new dump was
designed as a cylindrical block assembly, made out of a copper alloy and cooled
by forced airflow. In order to determine the energy density distribution
deposited by the beam in the dump, Monte Carlo simulations were performed using
the FLUKA code, and thermo-mechanical analyses were carried out by importing
the energy density into ANSYS. In addition, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD)
simulations of the airflow were performed in order to accurately estimate the
heat transfer convection coefficient on the surface of the dump. This paper
describes the design process, highlights the constraints and challenges of
integrating a new dump for increased beam power into the existing facility and
provides data on the operation of the dump
Analysis on the mechanical effects induced by beam impedance heating on the HL-LHC target dump injection segmented (TDIS) absorber
The High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) Project at CERN calls for increasing beam brightness and intensity. In such a scenario, critical accelerator devices need to be redesigned and rebuilt. Impedance is among the design drivers, since its thermo-mechanical effects could
lead to premature device failures. In this context, the current work reports the results of a multiphysics study to assess the electromagnetic and thermo-mechanical behaviour of the Target Dump Injection Segmented (TDIS). It first discusses the outcomes of the impedance analysis performed to characterise the resistive wall and the high order resonant modes (HOMs) trapped in the TDIS structures. Then, their
RF-heating effects and the related temperature distribution are considered. Finally, mechanical stresses induced by thermal gradients are studied in order to give a final validation on the design qualit
Design of the new proton synchrotron booster absorber scraper (PSBAS) in the framework of the large hadron collider injection upgrade (LIU) project
The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) Injector Upgrade (LIU) Project at CERN calls for increasing beam intensity for the LHC accelerator chain. Some machine components will not survive the new beam characteristics and need to be rebuilt for the new challenging scenario. This is particularly true for beam intercepting devices (BIDs) such as dumps, collimators, and absorber/scrapers, which are directly exposed
to beam impacts. In this context, this work summarizes conceptual design studies on the new Proton Synchrotron Booster (PSB) Absorber/Scraper (PSBAS), a device aimed at cleaning the beam halo at the very early stage of the PSB acceleration. This paper outlines the steps performed to fulfill the component design requirements. It discusses thermomechanical effects as a consequence of the beam-matter
collisions, simulated with the FLUKA Monte Carlo code and ANSYS® finite element software; and the impedance minimization study performed to prevent beam instabilities and to reduce RF-heating on the device
Experimental characterization of cyclic behaviour of pure lead: temperature sensitivity and strain-rate effects
Proton beam pulses with an energy of 20 GeV/c collide with a pure-lead based target installed in the neutron Time-Of-Flight facility (n_TOF) at the European Laboratory for Particle Physics (CERN). The interaction between the proton beam and lead produces neutrons via spallation mechanism and results in a rapid temperature increase and propagation of stress waves. To evaluate the material response in such challenging conditions, a reliable thermo-mechanical characterization is necessary for the calibration of an appropriate constitutive model for pure lead that is valid under cyclic plasticity and high temperature. In this work, the experimental bases for the development of such constitutive material description are lied. Starting with metallurgical characterization, the typical grain size of the material was initially investigated as well as any variations in the metallurgical features. The grains appeared to have an equivalent size ranging from 2 to 6 mm. Then, static tensile tests were conducted at room temperature and different strain-rates from 10−1 to 10−4 s−1. The obtained results were crucial for optimizing the specimen geometry and test setup for the subsequent cyclic tests. Tension-compression cyclic tests were performed at different strain amplitudes from 0.1 to 1.5%, and at three different temperatures (room temperature, 90 °C and 150 °C). The strain amplitudes were controlled by an extensometer and the strain field evolution during the test was recorded by means of 2D DIC.acceptedVersio
Experimental results and strength model identification of pure iridium
Intense and high energy proton beams are impacted with fixed materials (targets) in order to produce new
particles and secondary beams at CERN. In some of these targets, the requirement of reaching high yield
production of secondary particles points out to the use of high density materials. The interaction of the
beam with the atoms and nuclei of these materials produce extremely fast depositions of energy, highly
soliciting them from thermo-structural point of view due to subsequent rise of temperature and pressure
waves. Iridium is a good candidate material since exhibits very high density, high melting point, good
strength and stability at high temperature, and resistance to thermal shock.
The main goal of this study is the investigation of the mechanical behaviour at different temperatures and
strain-rates in tensile loading condition of pure iridium. A series of tests at room temperature at different
strain-rates (from 10-3 s-1 up to 104 s-1) was performed in order to obtain information about strain and
strain-rate sensitivity of the material. In addition, a series of tests at different temperatures in both quasistatic
and high strain-rate loading conditions was performed in order to obtain information about the
thermal softening of the material (from room temperature up to 1250 °C). The experimental data were
used to identify a strength model able to predict the material behaviour over wide ranges of variation of
the variables of interest
CERN antiproton target: Hydrocode analysis of its core material dynamic response under proton beam impact
Antiprotons are produced at CERN by colliding a 26 GeV=c proton beam with a fixed target made of a3 mm diameter, 55 mm length iridium core. The inherent characteristics of antiproton production involveextremely high energy depositions i nside the target when impacted by each primary proton beam, making
it one of the most dynamically demanding among high energy solid targets in the world, with a risetemperature above 2000 °C after each pulse impact and successive dynamic pressure waves of the order of GPa¿s. An optimized redesign of the current target is foreseen for the next 20 years of operation. As a first
step in the design procedure, this numerical study delves into the fundamental phenomena present in the target material core under proton pulse impact and subsequent pressure wave propagation by the use of hydrocodes. Three major phenomena have been identified, (i) the dominance of a high frequency radial
wave which produces destructive compressive-to-tensile pressure response (ii) The existence of end-ofpulse tensile waves and its relevance on the overall response (iii) A reduction of 44% in tensile pressure could be obtained by the use of a high density tantalum cladding.Torregrosa Martín, CL.; Perillo Marcone, A.; Calviani, M.; Muñoz-Cobo González, JL. (2016). CERN antiproton target: Hydrocode analysis of its core material dynamic response under proton beam impact. Physical Review Special Topics: Accelerators and Beams. 19(7):1-12. doi:10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.19.073402S11219
Integral cross section measurement of the12C(n,p)12B reaction
The integral cross section of the12C(n, p)12B reaction was measured at the neutron time of flight facility nTOF
at CERN, from the reaction threshold at 13.6 MeV up to 10 GeV, by means of the combined activation and a timeofflight
technique. The integral result is expressed as the number of12B nuclei produced per single pulse of the neutron
beam. A simple integral expression is given for calculating the number of produced12B nuclei from any given evaluated
cross section and/or model prediction. © 2015, CERN. All rights reserved.Postprint (author's final draft
Measurement of the240Pu(n,f) cross-section at the CERN n-TOF facility: First results from EAR-2
The accurate knowledge of neutron cross-sections of a variety of plutonium isotopes and other minor
actinides, such as neptunium, americium and curium, is crucial for feasibility and performance studies of advanced
nuclear systems (Generation-IV reactors, Accelerator Driven Systems). In this context, the240Pu(n,f) cross-section
was measured with the time-of-flight technique at the CERN n-TOF facility at incident neutron energies ranging from
thermal to several MeV. The present measurement is the first to have been performed at n-TOF's newly commissioned
Experimental Area II (EAR-2), which is located at the end of an 18 m neutron beam-line and features a neutron fluence
that is 25-30 times higher with respect to the existing 185 m flight-path (EAR-1), as well as stronger suppression of
sample-induced backgrounds, due to the shorter times-of-flight involved. Preliminary results are presented. © 2015,
CERN. All rights reserved.Postprint (published version
FIB-SEM investigation and uniaxial compression of flexible graphite
Flexible graphite (FG) with 1 - 1.2 g/cm density is employed as beam
energy absorber material in the CERN's Large Hadron Collider (LHC) beam dumping
system. However, the increase of energy deposited expected for new HL-LHC
(High-Luminosity LHC) design demanded for an improvement in reliability and
safety of beam dumping devices, and the need for a calibrated material model
suitable for high-level FE simulations has been prioritized. This work sets the
basic knowledge to develop a material model for FG suitable to this aim. A
review of the FG properties available in literature is first given, followed by
FIB-SEM (Focused Ion Beam - Scanning Electron Microscopy) microstructure
investigation and monotonic and cyclic uniaxial compression tests. Similarities
with other well-known groups of materials such as crushable foams, crumpled
materials and compacted powders have been discussed. A simple 1D
phenomenological model has been used to fit the experimental stress-strain
curves and the accuracy of the result supports the assumptions that the
graphite-like microstructure and the crumpled meso-structure play the major
role under out-of-plane uniaxial compression.Comment: Pre-print template, 57 pages, 14 figure
Advances and new ideas for neutron-capture astrophysics experiments at CERN n_TOF
The version of record of this article, first published in [The Europen Physics Journal A], is available online at Publisher’s website: http://dx.doi.org/10.1140/epja/s10050-022-00876-7This article presents a few selected developments and future ideas related to the measurement of (n,¿) data of astrophysical interest at CERN n_TOF. The MC-aided analysis methodology for the use of low-efficiency radiation detectors in time-of-flight neutron-capture measurements is discussed, with particular emphasis on the systematic accuracy. Several recent instrumental advances are also presented, such as the development of total-energy detectors with ¿ - ray imaging capability for background suppression, and the development of an array of small-volume organic scintillators aimed at exploiting the high instantaneous neutron-flux of EAR2. Finally, astrophysics prospects related to the intermediate i neutron-capture process of nucleosynthesis are discussed in the context of the new NEAR activation areaPeer ReviewedArticle escrit per 139 auors/autores C. Domingo-Pardo, V. Babiano-Suarez, J. Balibrea-Correa, L. Caballero, I. Ladarescu, J. Lerendegui-Marco, J. L. Tain, A. Tarifeño-Saldivia, O. Aberle, V. Alcayne, S. Altieri, S. Amaducci, J. Andrzejewski, M. Bacak, C. Beltrami, S. Bennett, A. P. Bernardes, E. Berthoumieux, M. Boromiza, D. Bosnar, M. Caamaño, F. Calviño, M. Calviani, D. Cano-Ott, A. Casanovas, F. Cerutti, G. Cescutti, S. Chasapoglou, E. Chiaveri, N. M. Chiera, P. Colombetti, N. Colonna, P. Console Camprini, G. Cortés, M. A. Cortés-Giraldo, L. Cosentino, S. Cristallo, S. Dellmann, M. Di Castro, S. Di Maria, M. Diakaki, M. Dietz, R. Dressler, E. Dupont, I. Durán, Z. Eleme, S. Fargier, B. Fernández, B. Fernández-Domínguez, P. Finocchiaro, S. Fiore, F. García-Infantes, A. Gawlik-Ramięga , G. Gervino, S. Gilardoni, E. González-Romero, C. Guerrero, F. Gunsing, C. Gustavino, J. Heyse, W. Hillman, D. G. Jenkins, E. Jericha, A. Junghans, Y. Kadi, K. Kaperoni, F. Käppeler, G. Kaur, A. Kimura, I. Knapová, U. Köster, M. Kokkoris, M. Krtička, N. Kyritsis, C. Lederer-Woods, G. Lerner, A. Manna, T. Martínez, A. Masi, C. Massimi, P. Mastinu, M. Mastromarco, E. A. Maugeri, A. Mazzone, E. Mendoza, A. Mengoni, P. M. Milazzo, I. Mönch, R. Mucciola, F. Murtas, E. Musacchio-Gonzalez, A. Musumarra, A. Negret, A. Pérez de Rada, P. Pérez-Maroto, N. Patronis, J. A. Pavón-Rodríguez, M. G. Pellegriti, J. Perkowski, C. Petrone, E. Pirovano, J. Plaza, S. Pomp, I. Porras, J. Praena, J. M. Quesada, R. Reifarth, D. Rochman, Y. Romanets, C. Rubbia, A. Sánchez, M. Sabaté-Gilarte, P. Schillebeeckx, D. Schumann, A. Sekhar, A. G. Smith, N. V. Sosnin, M. Stamati, A. Sturniolo, G. Tagliente, D. Tarrío, P. Torres-Sánchez, J. Turko, S. Urlass, E. Vagena, S. Valenta, V. Variale, P. Vaz, G. Vecchio, D. Vescovi, V. Vlachoudis, R. Vlastou, T. Wallner, P. J. Woods, T. Wright, R. Zarrella, P. ŽugecPostprint (published version
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