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Evaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and future

The ATLAS Inner Detector cooling system is the largest evaporative cooling system used in High Energy Physics today. During the installation and commissioning of this system many lessons had to be learned, but the system is now operating reliably, although it does not achieve all original design spe...

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Autor principal: Viehhauser, G
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1247023
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author Viehhauser, G
author_facet Viehhauser, G
author_sort Viehhauser, G
collection CERN
description The ATLAS Inner Detector cooling system is the largest evaporative cooling system used in High Energy Physics today. During the installation and commissioning of this system many lessons had to be learned, but the system is now operating reliably, although it does not achieve all original design specifications in all its circuits. We have re-evaluated the requirements for the cooling system, in particular for the evaporation temperature, over the full ATLAS operational lifetime. We find that the critical requirement is for thermal stability at the end of the operation in the high-radiation environment. To predict this we have developed a simple thermal model of the detector modules which yields analytical expressions to evaluate the results of changes in the operating conditions. After a comparison of the revised requirements and the actual present cooling system performance we will discuss various modifications to the system which will be required for future operation. In parallel we are developing a cooling system for the ATLAS phase II upgrade (sLHC) tracker, for which a set of requirements has been specified. Two technologies, based on different coolants, fluorocarbons or CO2, are being pursued.
id cern-1247023
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2010
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spelling cern-12470232019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1247023engViehhauser, GEvaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and futureDetectors and Experimental TechniquesThe ATLAS Inner Detector cooling system is the largest evaporative cooling system used in High Energy Physics today. During the installation and commissioning of this system many lessons had to be learned, but the system is now operating reliably, although it does not achieve all original design specifications in all its circuits. We have re-evaluated the requirements for the cooling system, in particular for the evaporation temperature, over the full ATLAS operational lifetime. We find that the critical requirement is for thermal stability at the end of the operation in the high-radiation environment. To predict this we have developed a simple thermal model of the detector modules which yields analytical expressions to evaluate the results of changes in the operating conditions. After a comparison of the revised requirements and the actual present cooling system performance we will discuss various modifications to the system which will be required for future operation. In parallel we are developing a cooling system for the ATLAS phase II upgrade (sLHC) tracker, for which a set of requirements has been specified. Two technologies, based on different coolants, fluorocarbons or CO2, are being pursued.ATL-INDET-PROC-2010-006oai:cds.cern.ch:12470232010-03-04
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Viehhauser, G
Evaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and future
title Evaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and future
title_full Evaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and future
title_fullStr Evaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and future
title_full_unstemmed Evaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and future
title_short Evaporative cooling in ATLAS - present and future
title_sort evaporative cooling in atlas - present and future
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1247023
work_keys_str_mv AT viehhauserg evaporativecoolinginatlaspresentandfuture