Abstract

Protons and heavy-ion beams at unprecedented energies are brought into collisions in the CERN Large Hadron Collider for high-energy experiments. The LHC multi-stage collimation system is designed to provide protection against regular and abnormal losses in order to reduce the risk of quenches of the superconducting magnets as well as keeping background in the experiments under control. Compared to protons, beam collimation in the heavy-ion runs is more challenging despite the lower stored beam energies, because the efficiency of cleaning with heavy ions has been observed to be two orders of magnitude worse. This is due to the differences in the interaction mechanisms between the beams and the collimators. Ion beams experience fragmentation and electromagnetic dissociation at the collimators that result in a substantial flux of off-rigidity particles that escape the collimation system. These out-scattered nuclei might be lost around the ring, eventually imposing a limit on the maximum achievable stored beam energy. Accurate simulation tools are crucial in order to understand and control these losses. A new simulation framework has been developed for heavy-ion collimation based on the coupling of the Sixtrack tracking code and the FLUKA Monte Carlo code that models the electromagnetic and nuclear interactions of the heavy-ions with the nuclei of the collimator material. In this paper, the new simulation tool is described. Furthermore, Sixtrack-FLUKA coupling simulations are presented and compared with measurements done with Pb ions in the LHC. The agreement between simulations and measurements is discussed and the results are used to understand and optimise losses. The simulation tool is also applied to predict the performance of the collimation system for the High-Luminosity LHC.

Highlights

  • At the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1], proton and heavy-ion beams are brought into collision for highenergy physics experiments

  • In the LHC, the validation of the collimation system performance is completed with asynchronous beam dump failure (ABDF) tests, which is a type of beam dump failures (BDFs) scenario, in order to validate the protection of the machine by the collimation system during such failures

  • The comparison of loss maps simulated with ICOSIM and LHC beam loss monitors (BLMs) measurements showed that the approximated physics models and optical tracking used in this software are adequate to identify some collimation issues, but not detailed enough to model accurately the collimation of heavy ions in the LHC [10,14]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

At the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1], proton and heavy-ion beams are brought into collision for highenergy physics experiments. In the LHC heavy-ion runs, a reduction by a factor 100 of the collimation cleaning efficiency has been observed in comparison to protons, which is not fully compensated by the lower stored beam energies reached during these runs [13,14,15,16]. The performance of the LHC collimation system, simulated with the SIXTRACKFLUKA coupling tool, is presented and compared to measurements for different scenarios for a better understanding and optimization of losses in the LHC. Using this new tool, the performance in future configurations is predicted. The simulation tool is used to predict the cleaning performance of the collimation system for the future upgraded HL-LHC configuration

HEAVY-ION BEAM COLLIMATION AT THE LHC
HEAVY-ION COLLIMATION SIMULATIONS
Coupling between SIXTRACK and FLUKA
APPLICATIONS AND COMPARISON OF SIMULATIONS WITH MEASUREMENTS
HL-LHC EXPECTED PERFORMANCE
CONCLUSIONS
Drift space
Quadrupole
Accelerating rf cavity
Findings
Thin multipole
Full Text
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