Title: RAL Template
1The T2K Beam Window
Matt Rooney Rutherford Appleton Laboratory BENE
November 2006
2Contents
- The T2K target station beam window
- - Design
- - Dynamic stress analysis
- Implications for beam windows at higher powers
- - T2K upgrade
- - Limits of windows
3T2K Beam Window Overview
4T2K Target Station
Window
Proton beam
Focusing horns
Target
5Beam Parameters
- 0.75 MW beam energy
- Gaussian profile with 4 mm rad rms beam spot
- 5 µs pulse 8 x 58ns bunches
- 1 pulse every 2 seconds at 30 GeV
6Beam Window - Requirements
- Withstand 1 atm pressure difference
- Endurance against temperature rise and thermal
stress due to pulsed proton beam - Beam loss must be less than 1, i.e. it must be
thin - Structure should be remotely maintained
7Beam Window Assembly
- Window Overview
- - Double skinned partial hemispheres, 0.3 mm
thick. - Helium cooling through annulus.
- Ti-6Al-4V.
- Inflatable pillow seal on either side.
- Inserted and removed remotely from above.
8Window Assembling
9Helium cooling
Upstream
Annulus
Helium velocity 5 m/s Heat transfer coefficient
150 W/m2K
Downstream
He in
He out
10Remote handling
Target station
Beam Position Monitor chamber
11Dynamic Stress Analysis
12Transient window temperature
Heat transfer coefficient 140 Wm2/K external
and 10 W/m2K internal Beam energy 50
GeV Frequency 0.284
Simulation shows temperature distribution over 5
pulses (15 seconds)
13Stress Waves
Stress wave development in 0.6 mm constant
thickness hemispherical window over first 2
microbunches.
140.62mm Window - Constructive Interference
150.3mm Window - Destructive interference
16Important lesson
- With a pulsed proton beam, window and target
geometry can greatly affect the magnitude of
stress. - Be careful to check dynamic stress when changing
beam parameters or target and window geometry!
17Higher Power
18T2K 3 MW upgrade
- Increased number of protons per pulse would push
the limits of Ti-6Al-4V. - 0.75 MW pulse 100 MPa shock stress
- 3.0 MW pulse 500 MPa shock stress
- Room temp yield strength Ti-6Al-4V 900 MPa.
- But higher power could also be achieved through a
higher beam frequency.
19Future Neutrino Factories and Super-beams
- Higher beam current through higher frequency.
- Less PPP, smaller beam spot.
- Adequate cooling and material selection can
mitigate for high energy deposit and thermal
shock. - Radiation damage becomes dominant effect.
20Radiation effects
- Irradiation affects different materials in
different ways - - Many metals lose ductility.
- - Graphite loses thermal conductivity.
- - Coefficient of Thermal Expansion of super
invar increases, but low CTE can be recovered by
annealing. -
21Conclusions
More RD needed for beam power upgrades. Irradiat
ed material data is crucial. This should be a
major research priority in the coming years.
22THANK YOU! QUESTIONS?