Abstract

A proposal for a very large liquid argon (68,000 kg) based neutrino detector is being studied. To validate the design principles and the detector technology, and to gain experience in the development of the cryostats and the cryogenic systems needed for such large experiments, several smaller scale installations will be developed and implemented, at Fermilab and CERN.The cryogenic systems for these installations will be developed, constructed, installed and commissioned by an international engineering team. These installations shall bring the required cooling power under specific conditions to the experiments for the initial cool-down and the long term operation, and shall also guarantee the correct distribution of the cooling power within the cryostats to ensure a homogeneous temperature distribution within the cryostat itself. The cryogenic systems shall also include gaseous and liquid phase argon purification devices to be used to reach and maintain the very stringent purity requirements needed for these installations (parts per trillion of oxygen equivalent contamination).This paper gives an overview of the installations involved in these cryogenic projects, describes the functional demands made to these cryogenic systems and presents the initial studies on which these future cryogenic systems will be based.

Highlights

  • An international collaboration called Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment (DUNE) is studying the installation of a 68,000 kg liquid argon Time Projection Chamber (TPC) divided over four underground caverns at the Sanford Underground Research Facility (SURF), South-Dakota, US

  • Description of the cryogenic modes Liquid nitrogen in open loop will be used as cooling source for all the prototype installations mentioned, while the DUNE-Long Baseline Neutrino Facilities (LBNF) project at SURF will use nitrogen refrigerators

  • Several cryogenic systems supporting the needs of large volume liquid argon neutrino detectors are being developed

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Summary

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Development of cryogenic installations for large liquid argon neutrino detectors This content has been downloaded from IOPscience. Please scroll down to see the full text. 101 012029 (http://iopscience.iop.org/1757-899X/101/1/012029) View the table of contents for this issue, or go to the journal homepage for more. Download details: IP Address: 188.184.3.56 This content was downloaded on 14/04/2016 at 08:17 Please note that terms and conditions apply

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