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ATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)

The detection of water leaks inside the service caverns of ATLAS detector is a critical concern due to potential damage to sensitive electronics. Sensing wires are used to monitor the detector and its infrastructure. To improve the detection of small leaks that have increased recently due to the cor...

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Autor principal: Luhari, Uku
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2871379
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author Luhari, Uku
author_facet Luhari, Uku
author_sort Luhari, Uku
collection CERN
description The detection of water leaks inside the service caverns of ATLAS detector is a critical concern due to potential damage to sensitive electronics. Sensing wires are used to monitor the detector and its infrastructure. To improve the detection of small leaks that have increased recently due to the corrosion of pipe joints, the Technical Coordination Water leak project developed and deployed a novel water leak detector based on ``Smart Paper'' developed by the University of Washington. The new material combines cellulose and carbon nanotubes yielding a paper-like whose intrinsic resistance increase by the order of several thousand percent upon absorption of liquids. The material's texture enables the installation of the detector in complicated geometries like for example being wrapped around joints. This summer student project investigated the intrinsic resistance during absorption and drying of the material to provide data to model the response. The model can be used for detector optimisation, degradation studies and to enhance the so-far binary leak detection with an estimation of the amount of detected water
id cern-2871379
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2023
record_format invenio
spelling cern-28713792023-09-16T18:53:50Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2871379engLuhari, UkuATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)Particle Physics - ExperimentThe detection of water leaks inside the service caverns of ATLAS detector is a critical concern due to potential damage to sensitive electronics. Sensing wires are used to monitor the detector and its infrastructure. To improve the detection of small leaks that have increased recently due to the corrosion of pipe joints, the Technical Coordination Water leak project developed and deployed a novel water leak detector based on ``Smart Paper'' developed by the University of Washington. The new material combines cellulose and carbon nanotubes yielding a paper-like whose intrinsic resistance increase by the order of several thousand percent upon absorption of liquids. The material's texture enables the installation of the detector in complicated geometries like for example being wrapped around joints. This summer student project investigated the intrinsic resistance during absorption and drying of the material to provide data to model the response. The model can be used for detector optimisation, degradation studies and to enhance the so-far binary leak detection with an estimation of the amount of detected waterCERN-STUDENTS-Note-2023-131oai:cds.cern.ch:28713792023-09-15
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Luhari, Uku
ATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)
title ATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)
title_full ATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)
title_fullStr ATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)
title_full_unstemmed ATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)
title_short ATLAS Technical Coordination WAterLeakDetection project (WALD)
title_sort atlas technical coordination waterleakdetection project (wald)
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2871379
work_keys_str_mv AT luhariuku atlastechnicalcoordinationwaterleakdetectionprojectwald