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The LHC Vacuum System

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, involves two proton storage rings with colliding beams of 7 TeV. The machine will be housed in the existing LEP tunnel and requires 16 m long superconducting b ending magnets. The vacuum chamber will be the inner wall of the cryostat and hence at the temperat...

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Autor principal: Gröbner, Oswald
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/356437
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author Gröbner, Oswald
author_facet Gröbner, Oswald
author_sort Gröbner, Oswald
collection CERN
description The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, involves two proton storage rings with colliding beams of 7 TeV. The machine will be housed in the existing LEP tunnel and requires 16 m long superconducting b ending magnets. The vacuum chamber will be the inner wall of the cryostat and hence at the temperature of the magnet cold bore, i.e. at 1.9 K and therefore a very good cryopump. To reduce the cryogeni c power consumption, the heat load from synchrotron radiation and from the image currents in the vacuum chamber will be absorbed on a 'beam screen', which operates between 5 and 20 K, inserted in the magnet cold bore. The design pressure necessary for operation must provide a lifetime of several days and a further stringent requirement comes from the power deposition in the superconducting magnet coils due to protons scattered on the residual gas which could lead to a magnet quench. Cryopumping of gas on the cold surfaces provides the necessary low gas densities but it must be ensured that the vapour pressure of cryosorbed molecules, of which H2 and He would be the most critical species, remains within acceptable limits. In the room temperature sections of the LHC, specifically in the exper iments, the vacuum must be stable against ion induced desorption and ISR-type 'pressure bumps'.
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spelling cern-3564372023-05-31T13:20:14Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/356437engGröbner, OswaldThe LHC Vacuum SystemAccelerators and Storage RingsThe Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, involves two proton storage rings with colliding beams of 7 TeV. The machine will be housed in the existing LEP tunnel and requires 16 m long superconducting b ending magnets. The vacuum chamber will be the inner wall of the cryostat and hence at the temperature of the magnet cold bore, i.e. at 1.9 K and therefore a very good cryopump. To reduce the cryogeni c power consumption, the heat load from synchrotron radiation and from the image currents in the vacuum chamber will be absorbed on a 'beam screen', which operates between 5 and 20 K, inserted in the magnet cold bore. The design pressure necessary for operation must provide a lifetime of several days and a further stringent requirement comes from the power deposition in the superconducting magnet coils due to protons scattered on the residual gas which could lead to a magnet quench. Cryopumping of gas on the cold surfaces provides the necessary low gas densities but it must be ensured that the vapour pressure of cryosorbed molecules, of which H2 and He would be the most critical species, remains within acceptable limits. In the room temperature sections of the LHC, specifically in the exper iments, the vacuum must be stable against ion induced desorption and ISR-type 'pressure bumps'.LHC-Project-Report-181CERN-LHC-Project-Report-181oai:cds.cern.ch:3564371998-05-25
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Gröbner, Oswald
The LHC Vacuum System
title The LHC Vacuum System
title_full The LHC Vacuum System
title_fullStr The LHC Vacuum System
title_full_unstemmed The LHC Vacuum System
title_short The LHC Vacuum System
title_sort lhc vacuum system
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/356437
work_keys_str_mv AT grobneroswald thelhcvacuumsystem
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