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Final report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERN

The 27 km circumference LHC underground tunnel is a space in which the helium cooled LHC magnets are installed. The vacuum enclosures of the superconducting magnets are protected by over-pressure safety relief devices that open whenever cold helium escapes either from the magnet cold enclosure or fr...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dufay-Chanat, L, Bremer, J, Casas-Cubillos, J, Chorowski, M, Grabowski, M, Jedrusyna, A, Lindell, G, Nonis, M, Koettig, T, Vauthier, N, van Weelderen, R, Winkler, T
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/101/1/012123
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2145992
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author Dufay-Chanat, L
Bremer, J
Casas-Cubillos, J
Chorowski, M
Grabowski, M
Jedrusyna, A
Lindell, G
Nonis, M
Koettig, T
Vauthier, N
van Weelderen, R
Winkler, T
author_facet Dufay-Chanat, L
Bremer, J
Casas-Cubillos, J
Chorowski, M
Grabowski, M
Jedrusyna, A
Lindell, G
Nonis, M
Koettig, T
Vauthier, N
van Weelderen, R
Winkler, T
author_sort Dufay-Chanat, L
collection CERN
description The 27 km circumference LHC underground tunnel is a space in which the helium cooled LHC magnets are installed. The vacuum enclosures of the superconducting magnets are protected by over-pressure safety relief devices that open whenever cold helium escapes either from the magnet cold enclosure or from the helium supply headers, into this vacuum enclosure. A 3-m long no stay zone around these devices is defined based on scale model studies, protecting the personnel against cold burns or asphyxia caused by such a helium release event. Recently, several simulation studies have been carried out modelling the propagation of the helium/air mixture, resulting from the opening of such a safety device, along the tunnel. The released helium flows vary in the range between 1 kg/s and 0.1 kg/s. To validate these different simulation studies, real life mock-up tests have been performed inside the LHC tunnel, releasing helium flow rates of 1 kg/s, 0.3 kg/s and 0.1 kg/s. For each test, up to 1000 liters of liquid helium were released under standard operational tunnel conditions. The data recorded include oxygen concentration, temperature and flow speed measurements, and video footage used to assess qualitatively the visibility. These measurements have been made in the up- and downstream directions, with respect to the air ventilation flow, of the spill point. This paper presents the experimental set-up under which these release tests were made, the effects of these releases on the atmospheric tunnel condition as a function of the release flow rate. We discuss the modification to the personnel access conditions to the LHC tunnel that are presently implemented as a result of these tests.
id cern-2145992
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2015
record_format invenio
spelling cern-21459922022-08-10T13:08:04Zdoi:10.1088/1757-899X/101/1/012123http://cds.cern.ch/record/2145992engDufay-Chanat, LBremer, JCasas-Cubillos, JChorowski, MGrabowski, MJedrusyna, ALindell, GNonis, MKoettig, TVauthier, Nvan Weelderen, RWinkler, TFinal report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERNEngineeringThe 27 km circumference LHC underground tunnel is a space in which the helium cooled LHC magnets are installed. The vacuum enclosures of the superconducting magnets are protected by over-pressure safety relief devices that open whenever cold helium escapes either from the magnet cold enclosure or from the helium supply headers, into this vacuum enclosure. A 3-m long no stay zone around these devices is defined based on scale model studies, protecting the personnel against cold burns or asphyxia caused by such a helium release event. Recently, several simulation studies have been carried out modelling the propagation of the helium/air mixture, resulting from the opening of such a safety device, along the tunnel. The released helium flows vary in the range between 1 kg/s and 0.1 kg/s. To validate these different simulation studies, real life mock-up tests have been performed inside the LHC tunnel, releasing helium flow rates of 1 kg/s, 0.3 kg/s and 0.1 kg/s. For each test, up to 1000 liters of liquid helium were released under standard operational tunnel conditions. The data recorded include oxygen concentration, temperature and flow speed measurements, and video footage used to assess qualitatively the visibility. These measurements have been made in the up- and downstream directions, with respect to the air ventilation flow, of the spill point. This paper presents the experimental set-up under which these release tests were made, the effects of these releases on the atmospheric tunnel condition as a function of the release flow rate. We discuss the modification to the personnel access conditions to the LHC tunnel that are presently implemented as a result of these tests.oai:cds.cern.ch:21459922015
spellingShingle Engineering
Dufay-Chanat, L
Bremer, J
Casas-Cubillos, J
Chorowski, M
Grabowski, M
Jedrusyna, A
Lindell, G
Nonis, M
Koettig, T
Vauthier, N
van Weelderen, R
Winkler, T
Final report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERN
title Final report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERN
title_full Final report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERN
title_fullStr Final report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERN
title_full_unstemmed Final report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERN
title_short Final report on the Controlled Cold Helium Spill Test in the LHC tunnel at CERN
title_sort final report on the controlled cold helium spill test in the lhc tunnel at cern
topic Engineering
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/101/1/012123
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2145992
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