1 / 11

LiH Absorber for MICE

LiH Absorber for MICE. Alan Bross May 31, 2009. LiH Absorber in Cooling Channel. LiH absorbers are now the “baseline” for the initial 4D cooling Replaced LH 2 The R&D issues have to do with the material properties of LiH Thermal characteristics Thermal conductivity Stability

inoke
Télécharger la présentation

LiH Absorber for MICE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. LiH Absorber for MICE Alan Bross May 31, 2009

  2. LiH Absorber in Cooling Channel • LiH absorbers are now the “baseline” for the initial 4D cooling • Replaced LH2 • The R&D issues have to do with the material properties of LiH • Thermal characteristics • Thermal conductivity • Stability • Radiation Stability • Program Goal • Test Thermal properties of Hot-Isostatic Pressed LiH • Claimed to yield material with 98%+ theoretical density • Best thermal conductivity • Test in MICE Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  3. LiH Disc Fabrication • Subcontracted for production at Y12 • Produced by Hot Isostatic Pressing • Produced using existing mold design • Mechanical properties of final parts will be measured • Density, hardness, etc • Final Parts to be chemically tested • X-Rayed by Radiography to ensure no voids • Machined to size • Dimensional inspection • Coated with vapor barrier • Process steps STILL under discussion and Need to be finalized • Packaged in drum type container • Shipped to Fermilab via Fed-X • Production will consist of • 30 and 50 cm diameter disks (+2” disks for destructive testing) Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  4. Instrumented 30 Æ cm Disk 12 Blind holes for housing thermo-couples Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  5. Thermal Measurement Test Setup Foam board & gasket 1” copper tube with heaters High temp glass ceramic High temp low k gasket Machined LiH disc 12” dia steel ring Thermocouples X12 Flexible cooling tube Stainless steel base structure Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  6. MICE Step III.1 • Produce 50 cm Æ X 6.5 cm thick disk for MICE for first “cooling” measurement Solenoid Cerenkov Detector Calorimeter Time-of-flight Detector LiH Disk inside the Spool piece Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  7. LiH Absorber for MICE Step III.1 Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  8. Status of Negotiations with Y12 • All the technical specifications and production issues are resolved • The Order Has Been Placed! • Delivery in 8-12 weeks • Parts will have Parylene coating Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  9. Parylene C • Provides 10X better vapor barrier than epoxy Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  10. Carbon-Fiber Supports Fabrication to start this summer Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

  11. Summary • The LiH for Step III.1 is on order and should be delivered well in advance of when it will be needed for installation in the hall • Must begin to work with RAL safety • There should be no issues, but the sooner we start “educating”, the easier it will be • Peter Towndrow of the Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE) in Reading is an expert in LiH materials and has offered to come to RAL to brief RAL safety • The “Nuclear Material” Aspects of the material is also an issue • Since the disk for MICE contains > 50g of 6Li, it is considered nuclear material • Special shipping arrangements may have to be made • A RAF flight between Hanford and the UK may be used. • Will work this out with the Y12 people Alan Bross MICE CM24 June 2009

More Related