1 / 13

Radiation Levels in the CLIC Tunnel

Radiation Levels in the CLIC Tunnel. Sophie Mallows Thomas Otto CERN SC/RP. Overview. Simulation of particle and radiation transport using FLUKA 2008 Simplified model of CLIC tunnel Scored Absorbed doses in QP magnets

Download Presentation

Radiation Levels in the CLIC Tunnel

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. Radiation Levels in the CLIC Tunnel Sophie Mallows Thomas Otto CERN SC/RP

  2. Overview • Simulation of particle and radiation transport using FLUKA 2008 • Simplified model of CLIC tunnel • Scored • Absorbed doses in QP magnets • 20 MeV hadron fluence, 1MeV neutron equivalent fluence, Prompt doses in tunnel module

  3. FLUKA Geometry 4.5m

  4. Absorbed dose in QPs – Safe Limits • Magnetic Coils in QPs: • Epoxy becomes brittle • insulation may break down • Damage is related to Absorbed Dose, SI unit: J/Kg, special unit: Gray (Gy) • From past experience, a dose of several MGy over the lifetime of a magnet is acceptable • Guideline for CLIC: D < 1 MGy/ year

  5. Damage to Electronics - Effects 2 main effects: • Cumulative Effects (threshold) • Total Ionizing Dose (Gray) • Displacement Damage (1 MeV neutron equivalent) • Single Event Effects (SEEs) (probability) Due to hadrons > 20 MeV

  6. Damage to Electronics – Safe Limits • Dependent on Electronics • For SEE’s can only calculate probability of risk Levels used in for area classification in LHC study (R2E Study Group): • 1 MeV Neutrons • Low:  Fluence <1108 cm-2 • Medium: 1108 cm-2 < Fluence < 11010 cm-2 • High: 11010 cm-2 < Fluence • 20 MeV Hadrons • Low:  Fluence <1107 cm-2 • Medium: 1108 cm-2 < Fluence < 1109 cm-2 • High: 1109 cm-2 < Fluence • Dose • Low:  Dose <1Gy/yr • Medium: 1Gy/yr< Dose < 1kGy/yr • High: 1kGy/yr< Dose

  7. Calculation – Dose • 1500 GeV electrons lost in main beam QPs • Normalization : 180 continuous days running, fractional beam loss 2.5 10-7 per qp Averaged over length of tunnel module Averaged over width of 20cm • Electronics: • Low:  Dose <1Gy/yr • Medium: 1Gy/yr< Dose < 1kGy/yr • High: 1kGy/yr< Dose QP Limit : D < 1 MGy/ year

  8. Calculations -20 MeV Hadron Fluences • 1500 GeV electrons lost in main beam QPs • Normalization: 180 days continuous running, fractional beam loss 2.5 10-7 per qp Averaged over length of tunnel module Averaged over depth of 20cm • Low:  Fluence <1107 cm-2 • Medium: 1108 cm-2 < Fluence < 1109 cm-2 • High: 1109 cm-2 < Fluence

  9. Calculations - 1 MeV Neutron Equivalent Fluences on Silicon • 1500 GeV electrons lost in main beam QPs • Normalization : 180 days continuous running, fractional beam loss 2.5 10-7 per qp Averaged over length of tunnel module Averaged over depth of 20cm • Low:  Fluence <1108 cm-2 • Medium: 1108 cm-2 < Fluence < 11010 cm-2 • High: 11010 cm-2 < Fluence

  10. Additional Slides

  11. Spatial distributionss of Dose Normalization: 1 loss electron

  12. Fractional Beam Losses for 1 MGy/yr • Electron losses in 1 QP • Maximum dose per loss electron in scoring mesh (1cm3 bins) across QP • Fractional beam loss requirements for 1 MGy/yr

  13. “Single event error” SEE, CNGS example • SEU: ionising radiation changes the content of a elementary memory cell of a digital processor, spuriously or permanently. • The critical quantity is fluence of hadrons with E > 20 MeV, 20 (cm-2) • Experience from CNGS: at 20 = 2 107 devices start to show errors • Guideline for CLIC: 20 < 106 … 107/year T. Wijnands, TS-LEA CLIC Workshop 2008 Radiation levels in the CLIC tunnel

More Related