219 research outputs found
Radiation shielding calculations for MuCool Test Area at Fermilab
The MuCool Test Area (MTA) is an intense primary beam facility derived
directly from the Fermilab Linac to test heat deposition and other technical
concerns associated with the liquid hydrogen targets being developed for
cooling intense muon beams. In this shielding study the results of Monte Carlo
radiation shielding calculations performed using the MARS14 code for the MuCool
Test Area and including the downstream portion of the target hall and berm
around it, access pit, service building, and parking lot are presented and
discussed within the context of the proposed MTA experimental configuration.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figure
Mechanical Design of a High Energy Beam Absorber for the Advanced Superconducting Test Accelerator (ASTA) at Fermilab
A high energy beam absorber has been built for the Advanced Superconducting
Test Accelerator (ASTA) at Fermilab. In the facility's initial configuration,
an electron beam will be accelerated through 3 TTF-type or ILC-type RF
cryomodules to an energy of 750MeV. The electron beam will be directed to one
of multiple downstream experimental and diagnostic beam lines and then
deposited in one of two beam absorbers. The facility is designed to accommodate
up to 6 cryomodules, which would produce a 75kW beam at 1.5GeV; this is the
driving design condition for the beam absorbers. The beam absorbers consist of
water-cooled graphite, aluminum and copper layers contained in a Helium-filled
enclosure. This paper describes the mechanical implementation of the beam
absorbers, with a focus on thermal design and analysis. In addition, the
potential for radiation-induced degradation of the graphite is discussed.Comment: 3 pp. 3rd International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC 2012)
20-25 May 2012. New Orleans, Louisian
Protecting LHC Components Against Radiation Resulting from Colliding Beam Interactions
Beam-induced energy deposition in the LHC high luminosity interaction region (IR) components due to both pp collisions and beam loss in the IR vicinity is a significant challenge for the design of the high luminosity insertions. It was shown in our previous studies that a set of collimators in the machine and absorbers within the low-beta quadrupoles would reduce both the peak power density and total heat load to tolerable levels with a reasonable safety margin. In this paper the results of further optimization and comprehensive MARS calculations are briefly described for the updated IP1 and IP5 layouts and a base-line pp-collision source term. Power density, power dissipation, accumulated dose and residual dose rates are studied in the components of the inner triplets including their TAS absorbers, the TANneutral beam absorbers, separation dipoles, and quadrupoles of the outer triplets and possible collimators there. It is shown that the optimized absorbers and collimators provide adequate protection of all the critical components
Energy deposition studies for the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider inner triplet magnets
A detailed model of the High Luminosity LHC inner triplet region with new
large-aperture Nb3Sn magnets, field maps, corrector packages, and segmented
tungsten inner absorbers was built and implemented into the FLUKA and MARS15
codes. In the optimized configuration, the peak power density averaged over the
magnet inner cable width is safely below the quench limit. For the integrated
luminosity of 3000 fb-1, the peak dose in the innermost magnet insulator ranges
from 20 to 35 MGy. Dynamic heat loads to the triplet magnet cold mass are
calculated to evaluate the cryogenic capability. In general, FLUKA and MARS
results are in a very good agreement.Comment: 24 p
Energy Deposition Studies for the Hi-Lumi LHC Inner Triplet Magnets
A detailed model of the High Luminosity LHC inner triplet region with new
large-aperture Nb3Sn magnets, field maps, corrector packages, and segmented
tungsten inner absorbers was built and implemented into the FLUKA and MARS15
codes. In the optimized configuration, the peak power density averaged over the
magnet inner cable width is safely below the quench limit. For the integrated
luminosity of 3000 fb -1, the peak dose in the innermost magnet insulator
ranges from 20 to 35 MGy. Dynamic heat loads to the triplet magnet cold mass
are calculated to evaluate the cryogenic capability. In general, FLUKA and MARS
results are in a very good agreement.Comment: 4 pp. Presented paper at the 5th International Particle Accelerator
Conference, June 15 -20, 2014, Dresden, German
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