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Conclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC Tunnel

The LHC, currently under construction at CERN, will make use of superconducting magnets operating in super-fluid helium below 2 K provided via a separate cryogenic distribution line. An accidental spill of part of the helium inventory (approx. 12 tons per octant of 3.3-km length each) in the 3.8-m d...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Vadon, Marc, Manteca, Jorge
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1774698
http://cds.cern.ch/record/872640
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author Vadon, Marc
Manteca, Jorge
author_facet Vadon, Marc
Manteca, Jorge
author_sort Vadon, Marc
collection CERN
description The LHC, currently under construction at CERN, will make use of superconducting magnets operating in super-fluid helium below 2 K provided via a separate cryogenic distribution line. An accidental spill of part of the helium inventory (approx. 12 tons per octant of 3.3-km length each) in the 3.8-m diameter underground tunnel is a potential risk to personnel i.e. lack of visibility, cold, lack of oxygen. Using a finite volume model of a 100-m long typical tunnel section, several scenarios with different leak rates and temperatures were simulated. Further parameters considered were ventilation rate, slope of the tunnel, helium leak temperature, etc. in order to point out the most critical factors influencing temperature and helium concentration distribution in the tunnel. Finally, this analysis allowed us to determine a maximum mass flow that can be released in the tunnel without putting personnel at risk.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2004
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spelling cern-8726402019-09-30T06:29:59Zdoi:10.1063/1.1774698http://cds.cern.ch/record/872640engVadon, MarcManteca, JorgeConclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC TunnelHealth Physics and Radiation EffectsThe LHC, currently under construction at CERN, will make use of superconducting magnets operating in super-fluid helium below 2 K provided via a separate cryogenic distribution line. An accidental spill of part of the helium inventory (approx. 12 tons per octant of 3.3-km length each) in the 3.8-m diameter underground tunnel is a potential risk to personnel i.e. lack of visibility, cold, lack of oxygen. Using a finite volume model of a 100-m long typical tunnel section, several scenarios with different leak rates and temperatures were simulated. Further parameters considered were ventilation rate, slope of the tunnel, helium leak temperature, etc. in order to point out the most critical factors influencing temperature and helium concentration distribution in the tunnel. Finally, this analysis allowed us to determine a maximum mass flow that can be released in the tunnel without putting personnel at risk.CERN-TIS-2003-013-GS-CFoai:cds.cern.ch:8726402004
spellingShingle Health Physics and Radiation Effects
Vadon, Marc
Manteca, Jorge
Conclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC Tunnel
title Conclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC Tunnel
title_full Conclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC Tunnel
title_fullStr Conclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC Tunnel
title_full_unstemmed Conclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC Tunnel
title_short Conclusion of the He Spill Simulations in the LHC Tunnel
title_sort conclusion of the he spill simulations in the lhc tunnel
topic Health Physics and Radiation Effects
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.1774698
http://cds.cern.ch/record/872640
work_keys_str_mv AT vadonmarc conclusionofthehespillsimulationsinthelhctunnel
AT mantecajorge conclusionofthehespillsimulationsinthelhctunnel