Abstract

The correct functioning of a collimation system is crucial to safely and successfully operate high-energy particle accelerators, such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). However, the requirements to handle high-intensity beams can be demanding, and accident scenarios must be well studied in order to assess if the collimator design is robust against possible error scenarios. One of the catastrophic, though not very probable, accident scenarios identified within the LHC is an asynchronous beam dump. In this case, one (or more) of the 15 precharged kicker circuits fires out of time with the abort gap, spraying beam pulses onto LHC machine elements before the machine protection system can fire the remaining kicker circuits and bring the beam to the dump. If a proton bunch directly hits a collimator during such an event, severe beam-induced damage such as magnet quenches and other equipment damage might result, with consequent downtime for the machine. This study investigates a number of newly defined jaw error cases, which include angular misalignment errors of the collimator jaw. A numerical finite element method approach is presented in order to precisely evaluate the thermomechanical response of tertiary collimators to beam impact. We identify the most critical and interesting cases, and show that a tilt of the jaw can actually mitigate the effect of an asynchronous dump on the collimators. Relevant collimator damage limits are taken into account, with the aim to identify optimal operational conditions for the LHC.

Highlights

  • The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a circular particle accelerator installed in an underground tunnel with a circumference of 27 km

  • This paper evaluates the effectiveness of operating with tilted collimator jaws in case of a direct impact of one full intensity bunch on tertiary collimators (TCTs), as a consequence of an asynchronous beam dump accident

  • This study focuses on TCTs as they are the non-carbon fiber composite (CFC) collimation system elements that are mostly at risk of damage in case of an asynchronous beam abort

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a circular particle accelerator installed in an underground tunnel with a circumference of 27 km. The TCTs are meant to intercept the tertiary halo close to the particle physics experiments and the sensitive triplet magnets They provide local protection of the quadrupole triplets in the final focusing system, and are essential for decreasing the beam-induced backgrounds in the experiments [12]. One of the worst accident cases in the LHC corresponds to an asynchronous trigger of the beam dumping system [14], in which one or more high energy density bunches might directly impact a collimator with possible serious consequences [15]. This paper evaluates the effectiveness of operating with tilted collimator jaws in case of a direct impact of one full intensity bunch on TCTs, as a consequence of an asynchronous beam dump accident.

STUDIED ACCIDENT CASES
Simulation tools
Geometry and finite element discretization
Material modeling
Loading and boundary conditions
Thermal analyses
Structural analyses
CONCLUSIONS
Full Text
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