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Cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years

Applied superconductivity has become a key technology for high-energy particle accelerators, allowing to reach higher beam energy while containing size, capital expenditure and operating costs. Large and powerful cryogenic systems are therefore ancillary to low-temperature superconducting accelerato...

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Autor principal: Lebrun, Philippe
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/171/1/012001
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2152404
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author Lebrun, Philippe
author_facet Lebrun, Philippe
author_sort Lebrun, Philippe
collection CERN
description Applied superconductivity has become a key technology for high-energy particle accelerators, allowing to reach higher beam energy while containing size, capital expenditure and operating costs. Large and powerful cryogenic systems are therefore ancillary to low-temperature superconducting accelerator devices – magnets and high-frequency cavities – distributed over multi-kilometre distances and operating generally close to the normal boiling point of helium, but also above 4.2 K in supercritical and down to below 2 K in superfluid. Additionally, low-temperature operation in accelerators may also be required by considerations of ultra-high vacuum, limited stored energy and beam stability. We discuss the rationale for cryogenics in high-energy particle accelerators, review its development over the past half-century and present its outlook in future large projects, with reference to the main engineering domains of cryostat design and heat loads, cooling schemes, efficient power refrigeration and cryogenic fluid management.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2016
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spelling cern-21524042019-10-15T15:20:00Zdoi:10.1088/1757-899X/171/1/012001http://cds.cern.ch/record/2152404engLebrun, PhilippeCryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty yearsAccelerators and Storage RingsApplied superconductivity has become a key technology for high-energy particle accelerators, allowing to reach higher beam energy while containing size, capital expenditure and operating costs. Large and powerful cryogenic systems are therefore ancillary to low-temperature superconducting accelerator devices – magnets and high-frequency cavities – distributed over multi-kilometre distances and operating generally close to the normal boiling point of helium, but also above 4.2 K in supercritical and down to below 2 K in superfluid. Additionally, low-temperature operation in accelerators may also be required by considerations of ultra-high vacuum, limited stored energy and beam stability. We discuss the rationale for cryogenics in high-energy particle accelerators, review its development over the past half-century and present its outlook in future large projects, with reference to the main engineering domains of cryostat design and heat loads, cooling schemes, efficient power refrigeration and cryogenic fluid management.CERN-ACC-2016-0033oai:cds.cern.ch:21524042016-03-30
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Lebrun, Philippe
Cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years
title Cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years
title_full Cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years
title_fullStr Cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years
title_full_unstemmed Cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years
title_short Cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years
title_sort cryogenics for high-energy particle accelerators: highlights from the first fifty years
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/171/1/012001
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2152404
work_keys_str_mv AT lebrunphilippe cryogenicsforhighenergyparticleacceleratorshighlightsfromthefirstfiftyyears