Abstract

The LHCb Vertex Detector (VELO) will be upgraded in 2018 to a lightweight pixel detector capable of 40 MHz readout and operation in very close proximity to the LHC beams. The thermal management of the system will be provided by evaporative CO2 circulating in microchannels embedded within thin silicon plates. This solution has been selected due to the excellent thermal efficiency, the absence of thermal expansion mismatch with silicon ASICs and sensors, the radiation hardness of CO2, and very low contribution to the material budget. Although microchannel cooling is gaining considerable attention for applications related to microelectronics, it is still a novel technology for particle physics experiments, in particular when combined with evaporative CO2 cooling. The R&D effort for LHCb is focused on the design and layout of the channels together with a fluidic connector and its attachment which must withstand pressures up to 170 bar. Even distribution of the coolant is ensured by means of the use of restrictions implemented before the entrance to a race track like layout of the main cooling channels. The coolant flow and pressure drop have been simulated as well as the thermal performance of the device. This proceeding describes the design and optimization of the cooling system for LHCb and the latest prototyping results.

Highlights

  • Considering the CO2 is at -20 ̊C and assuming 30% vapour quality, we need a flow of

  • We verify after the soldering that the total thickness corresponds to the sum of the individual components heights

  • None break. n Leak test with water up to 400bar: no leak observed

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Summary

Current LHCb VELO

LHCb experiment: One of the 4 major experiments at LHC Forward spectrometer designed to measure CP violation, study rare decays of c and b hadrons and search for new physics

End of lifetime expectation
New layout
Xray pictures
Conclusion
Silicon with the slits pattern on the metallization
Full Text
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