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Modeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimators

Modern hadron machines with high beam intensity may suffer from material damage in the case of large beam losses and even beam-intercepting devices, such as collimators, can be harmed. A systematic method to evaluate thresholds of damage owing to the impact of high energy particles is therefore cruc...

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Autores principales: Quaranta, E, Bertarelli, A, Bruce, R, Carra, F, Cerutti, F, Lechner, A, Redaelli, S, Skordis, E, Gradassi, P
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.20.091002
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2286305
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author Quaranta, E
Bertarelli, A
Bruce, R
Carra, F
Cerutti, F
Lechner, A
Redaelli, S
Skordis, E
Gradassi, P
author_facet Quaranta, E
Bertarelli, A
Bruce, R
Carra, F
Cerutti, F
Lechner, A
Redaelli, S
Skordis, E
Gradassi, P
author_sort Quaranta, E
collection CERN
description Modern hadron machines with high beam intensity may suffer from material damage in the case of large beam losses and even beam-intercepting devices, such as collimators, can be harmed. A systematic method to evaluate thresholds of damage owing to the impact of high energy particles is therefore crucial for safe operation and for predicting possible limitations in the overall machine performance. For this, a three-step simulation approach is presented, based on tracking simulations followed by calculations of energy deposited in the impacted material and hydrodynamic simulations to predict the thermomechanical effect of the impact. This approach is applied to metallic collimators at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which in standard operation intercept halo protons, but risk to be damaged in the case of extraction kicker malfunction. In particular, tertiary collimators protect the aperture bottlenecks, their settings constrain the reach in β* and hence the achievable luminosity at the LHC experiments. Our calculated damage levels provide a very important input on how close to the beam these collimators can be operated without risk of damage. The results of this approach have been used already to push further the performance of the present machine. The risk of damage is even higher in the upgraded high-luminosity LHC with higher beam intensity, for which we quantify existing margins before equipment damage for the proposed baseline settings.
id oai-inspirehep.net-1624104
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2017
record_format invenio
spelling oai-inspirehep.net-16241042022-08-10T12:32:38Zdoi:10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.20.091002http://cds.cern.ch/record/2286305engQuaranta, EBertarelli, ABruce, RCarra, FCerutti, FLechner, ARedaelli, SSkordis, EGradassi, PModeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimatorsAccelerators and Storage RingsModern hadron machines with high beam intensity may suffer from material damage in the case of large beam losses and even beam-intercepting devices, such as collimators, can be harmed. A systematic method to evaluate thresholds of damage owing to the impact of high energy particles is therefore crucial for safe operation and for predicting possible limitations in the overall machine performance. For this, a three-step simulation approach is presented, based on tracking simulations followed by calculations of energy deposited in the impacted material and hydrodynamic simulations to predict the thermomechanical effect of the impact. This approach is applied to metallic collimators at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC), which in standard operation intercept halo protons, but risk to be damaged in the case of extraction kicker malfunction. In particular, tertiary collimators protect the aperture bottlenecks, their settings constrain the reach in β* and hence the achievable luminosity at the LHC experiments. Our calculated damage levels provide a very important input on how close to the beam these collimators can be operated without risk of damage. The results of this approach have been used already to push further the performance of the present machine. The risk of damage is even higher in the upgraded high-luminosity LHC with higher beam intensity, for which we quantify existing margins before equipment damage for the proposed baseline settings.oai:inspirehep.net:16241042017
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Quaranta, E
Bertarelli, A
Bruce, R
Carra, F
Cerutti, F
Lechner, A
Redaelli, S
Skordis, E
Gradassi, P
Modeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimators
title Modeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimators
title_full Modeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimators
title_fullStr Modeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimators
title_full_unstemmed Modeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimators
title_short Modeling of beam-induced damage of the LHC tertiary collimators
title_sort modeling of beam-induced damage of the lhc tertiary collimators
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.20.091002
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2286305
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