Title: Collimation Issues for the Phase 1 Insertion Upgrade
1Collimation Issues for the Phase 1 Insertion
Upgrade
- R. Assmann, CERN, AB/ABP
- Acknowledgements to the colleagues in the LHC
Collimation Working Group which worked out and
presented most of the results shown here - http//www.cern.ch/lhc-collimation
- Acknowledgements to the colleagues in AB/ABP and
AT for discussions and help in understanding the
upgrade ideas. - CERN, Switzerland
- November 1st, 2007
21) Why Talk About Collimation?
- Collimation protects the machine aperture against
damage and quenches. - Any significant change in aperture must be
revisited also from the collimation and machine
protection view possible impact on protection,
loss distribution, activation, quench
limitations, experimental background. - Critical issues The HERA insertion upgrade was
heavily affected by unforeseen problems with beam
loss and background after the upgrade. Loss in
overall integrated luminosity with insertion
upgrade. - Goal of this talk Give collimation input to the
ongoing discussions for the phase 1 triplet
upgrade such that it will be fully successful. - Note MP and dump issues only mentioned as far as
collimation is affected ? for additional input
see presentations at LUMI06 by B. Goddard and R.
Schmidt.
3System Design
Phase 1
Momentum Cleaning
Betatron Cleaning
Final system Layount is 100 frozen!
? Outcome of accelerator physics energy
deposition optimization
4Multi-Stage Cleaning Protection
Beam axis
Beam propagation
Impact parameter
Collimator
Core
Particle
Unavoidable losses
Primary halo (p)
Secondary halo
p
p
Shower
p
Tertiary halo
Impact parameter 1 mm
p
e
p
Primary collimator
Secondary collimator
Shower
e
SC magnets and particle physics exp.
Absorber
Super-conducting magnets
Absorber
W/Cu
CFC
W/Cu
CFC
5Functional Description
- Two-stage cleaning (robust CFC primary and
secondary collimators). - Catching the cleaning-induced showers (Cu/W
collimators). - Protecting the warm magnets against heat and
radiation (passive absorbers). - Local cleaning and protection at triplets (Cu/W
collimators). - Catching the p-p induced showers (Cu
collimators). - Intercepting mis-injected beam (TCDI, TDI, TCLI).
- Intercepting dumped beam (TCDQ, TCS.TCDQ).
- Scraping and halo diagnostics (primary
collimators and thin scrapers).
6Setting Strategy for Collimation and Protection
Elements
- Clear requirements for settingsLHC ring
aperture sets scale aring? tight LHC
apertureProtection devices must protect ring
aperture aprot lt aring ? protect against
injected beam take into account
accuraciesSecondary collimators tighter than
protection asec lt aprot ? avoid too much
secondary halo hitting protection
devicesPrimary collimators tighter than
secondary aprim lt asec ? primary collimators
define the aperture bottleneck in the LHC
for cleaning of circulating beam! - These conditions should always be fulfilled
Not allowed to use protection devices (or warm
aperture limits) as a single-stage cleaning
system!
R. Assmann, Chamonix 2005
77 TeV Settings at (in sb ,d0, nominal b)
aabs 20.0 s Active absorbers in IR3 asec3
18.0 s Secondary collimators IR3 (H) aprim3
15.0 s Primary collimators IR3 (H) aabs
10.0 s Active absorbers in and IR7 aring 8.4
s Triplet cold aperture aprot 8.3 s TCT
protection and cleaning at triplet aprot 7.5
s TCDQ (H) protection element asec 7.0 s
Secondary collimators IR7 aprim 6.0 s
Primary collimators IR7 ? Canonical 6/7 s
collimation settings are achievable!
R. Assmann, Chamonix 2005
82) Insertion Aspects for Collimation
- Chamonix 2003 (R. Assmann)
- Only way to open collimator gaps Increase
triplet aperture! Still true but lots of things
understood since 2003!
92004 Addition of Tertiary Collimators
- Collimator settings defined with required
hierarchy. - Detailed loss maps for beam 1 and beam 2
produced. - Problem Halo losses in triplets (standard
optics, 0.55m) up to 25 times above quench limit. - Solution Addition of tertiary collimators
- Make use of large aperture until D1.
- Placed before D1 such that all losses are
intercepted before the triplet is hit. - Completely solves loss issue.
- Improves machine protection (allowing feasible
requirements in local dump protection in IR6). - Checked for experimental background in CMS and
ATLAS Beneficial effect.
10System Design
Phase 1
Momentum Cleaning
Betatron Cleaning
117 TeV Proton Loss Distribution
p losses inefficiency
G. Robert-Demolaize et al
12Beam1 and Beam 2 Asymmetry
Beam1, 7 TeV Betatron cleaning Ideal performance
TCDQ
Quench limit (nominal I, t0.2h)
Local inefficiency 1/m
Beam2, 7 TeV Betatron cleaning Ideal performance
TCDQ
Quench limit (nominal I, t0.2h)
Local inefficiency p lost in bin over total p
lost over length of aperture bin!
13Asymmetry IR1/IR5
- Beam 1 betatron halo losses on TCT left sides of
IP - IR1 5e-4 of total halo loss
- IR5 5e-6 of total halo loss
- Beam 2 betatron halo losses on TCT right sides of
IP - IR1 2e-5 of total halo loss
- IR5 3e-4 of total halo loss
- Halo losses in experimental insertions are
asymmetric. Detailed losses depend on collimator
settings, phase advance and halo phase space
properties. - Above settings assume IR2 and IR8 collimators
present and at same setting as IR1/IR5 teriary
collimators. We might open them and losses in
IR1/IR5 will increase (small gaps not needed in
IR2/8 trapped mode issues with higher b, small
gaps in IR2/8).? In worst case increase losses
by a factor 2.
14Interim Summary I
- Phase 1 collimation system fully shadows the
IR1/5 at 7 TeV. - Three components to reach this goal
- IR3/IR7 collimators set to shadow the triplet
(depends on beta and triplet aperture) against
the primary and secondary halo. - Local tertiary collimators TCT (58 mm full
maximum gap) to clean tertiary halo which would
otherwise be 20 times above quench limit 4 per
IR. - Local copper absorbers TCL/TCLP to catch showers
from IP before the arc. - Insertion upgrade (ignoring cleaning efficiency
limitations in IR7) - An increased minimum normalized aperture in
IR1/IR5 can in principle be used to open the
IR3/IR7 collimators ? reduced impedance. - Even if n1 is increased it is expected that the
stringent aperture bottle-necks (including new
and earlier bottle-necks) in IR1/IR5 must be
protected with tertiary collimators (new types,
more TCT 4 ? 6). - Opening gaps can affect other issues (efficiency,
protection, ).
152003 Reduce Impedance with Increased Gaps!
Typical collimator half gap
104
103
102
LHC impedance without collimators
Transverse Impedance MO/m
10
factor 1.6
1
10-1
0 2 4
6 8 10
Half Gap mm
F. Ruggiero, L. Vos
2007 E. Metral ? stable beam with 50 larger
gaps from detailed analysis
162) Limitation in Cleaning Efficiency
- As just shown, cleaning efficiency in IR1/5 is no
issue any more. - Fundamental limitation arises at the end of IR7
(single-diffractive scattering tertiary halo)
after betatron cleaning. - Nuclear physics routine cross-checked between 3
different programs. - Independent studies at CERN, SLAC and IHEP agree
on the predicted limitations. - Outside experts usually think we are even
optimistic - Loss assumptions.
- Only partial errors included (loss of factor 2
seen). - Uncertainties in diffusion and halo models.
- SNS has just published a paper with 5-6 times
higher fractional losses in magnets than
predicted in simulations. Absolute losses locally
up to 20 times above specifications!
17Preventing Quenches
- Quench limits of SC magnets given by design.
- Overall criterion for preventing quenches
Fractional Leakage Dilution Fractional
quench loss rate rate length limit (w/o BLM
threshold)
Minimize Minimize Spread losses inefficiency losse
s
Example 0.1 per s 1/5,000 1/(10 m) ? 2.0 10-8
(ms)-1
18Performance Prediction
19Uncertainties
- Many uncertainties do affect results
- Uncertainty in loss assumptions. Supported by
external collimation review in 2004. However,
some find the loss rates too low, other too high. - Impact from imperfections Almost always drives
efficiency down. - Required margin from BLM thresholds Factor 3
announced ? beam abort 3 times below quench
limit. - Impact from showers Dilutes losses ? gain
somewhat. - Quench limits Any reduction/increase in quench
limit will reduce/improve the performance reach. - We try to do the best possible simulations, given
the available resources. - Extensive cross-checks with other ongoing
efforts in the field agreement on the predicted
efficiency limitation (not a single published
result with a different conclusion). - Approach Being fully aware of the uncertainties,
use the predictions to guide us towards achieving
LHC performance goals.
207 TeV Proton Loss Prediction
Ideal case
G. Robert-Demolaize et al
With design orbit error
21Peak Inefficiency Versus Gap
C. Bracco et al
Phase 1 upgrade possibility (n19)
LHC nominal
BLM threshold?
Quench limit
0 5 10
15 20
25
Aperture primary collimator s
22Other Possible Impacts from Larger Collimation
Gaps in IR7
- Machine Protection For example, in case of
magnet trips (for example affecting x) with
larger gaps (1) the first losses are seen later.
(2) dx/dt when are seen is increased. ? R.
Schmidt and MPWG. - Momentum collimation gaps must be opened as well
? impact on abort gap population (synchrotron
radiation) and abort gap cleaning. - Increased impact of off-momentum beta-beat (if
retraction distance between primary and
secondary jaws is kept constant).
23Interim Summary 2
- Cleaning efficiency in IR7 is predicted to be the
driving limitation from LHC collimation, more
severe than impedance. - Reducing collimator-induced impedance issue will
not affect the overall limit (limitations must
not be added, only the bigger counts). - Small gaps are required to maximize cleaning
efficiency in IR7. - Gaps can still be opened but will lead to a
decrease in the allowable intensity and such to a
decrease in performance. - Efficiency must be addressed in addition to
impedance. - With this in mind, an increased aperture in IR1/5
and the phase 1 upgrade are fully supported
from collimation, as it will provide the basic
possibility of opening gaps after the phase 2
upgrade. - Other side effects of increased gaps must not be
forgotten!
243) Off-Momentum Beta Beat
- Off-momentum beat beat mixes up the 6D phase
space and can corrupt collimation performance
(secondary collimator becomes a primary
collimator for off-momentum particles). - Studies by C. Bracco and myself complete for
nominal optics. - Presentation by C. Bracco next Monday in LCU
meeting. - Here, first glance at preliminary results on
upgrade optics that we got from R. de Maria.
25Upgrade optics nominal setting (TCP_at_6s,
TCSG_at_7s....) Horizontal Collimators
Allowed phase (yellow area) space should always
be defined by primary collimators (red lines). It
is not below d1e-3! Could lead to break-down
of cleaning efficiency for off-momentum particles!
C. Bracco, R. Assmann
26Upgrade optics nominal setting (TCP_at_6s,
TCSG_at_7s...) - Vertical collimators
Secondary collimators become primary collimators!
27Upgrade optics nominal setting (TCP_at_6s,
TCSG_at_7s....) IR7 collimators retraction
Nominal retraction
Secondary collimator becomes primary collimator
28Upgrade optics new setting(TCP.IR7_at_9s,
TCSG.IR7_at_10s,TCLA.IR7_at_13s) IR7 collimators
Retraction
Nominal retraction
Secondary collimator becomes primary collimator
29Interim Summary 3
- We see noticeable but still acceptable effects
from off-momentum beta-beat for the nominal LHC
optics 30 loss in retraction. - Preliminary results show much stronger effects
for upgrade optics, up to the point where
multi-stage cleaning is corrupted. - Importance will depend on longitudinal beam
lifetime, synchrotron losses and equilibrium beam
distribution in off-momentum. - Remedy Use larger retraction ? increased
aperture would be used (at least partially) for
increased retraction (reduced gain in impedance). - Here we only show primary and secondary
collimators. All collimator families must
analyzed for this effect. - Preliminary results further work needed and
optics might be adapted to minimize impact.
304) Input and Proposals
- The upgraded triplets should include fixed masks
for the incoming beam. This provides the best
possible triplet protection and cleaning. These
fixed masks should allow for easy exchange in
case of damage. - The upgrade optics should be compatible with the
58Â mm full aperture of the existing tertiary
collimators, which are located between the D1 and
the D2 magnets. - In case that requirement 2) cannot be fulfilled,
limited local background control for ATLAS and
CMS must either be abandoned or new tertiary
collimators must be developed, tested and
constructed. This affects up to eight tertiary
collimators installed in IR1 and IR5. - The goal of providing room for opening primary
collimators in IR7 to 9 s is supported (50
increased collimator aperture as indicated by
studies from E. Metral). This corresponds to n1
10.5 (up from n1 7) if we just scale n1. - For ultimate intensity a factor 2 increase in gap
(compared to today) is needed to remove the
impedance limit. This means n114. Stick to
nominal in the next slides.
31Input and Proposals continued
- To respect the specified hierarchy of collimator
and protection settings minimal available IR
aperture after upgrade must be 2.4 s to 3.6 s
larger than the assumed setting of the primary
collimators. Required 12.6 s (this corresponds
to n1 10.5). If we take a constant 3s increase
of all gaps 11.4 s. Will provide less
reduction on impedance! - The feasibility of any reduction in available
aperture in adjacent magnets to the triplets must
be checked with full evaluations of beam halo,
beam loss maps, energy deposition, impedance and
experimental background. The placement of
additional tertiary collimators might be
required. - The showers from the IP must be tracked into the
arc to verify that the foreseen TCL/TCLP
collimators are still fully adequate. - The performance reach of the LHC after the
insertion upgrade must be calculated, taking into
account also performance limitations in other
areas of the machine. This concerns in particular
the predicted limitations due to cleaning
efficiency.
32Input and Proposals continued
- If it is assumed that the betatron collimators
are opened after a triplet upgrade, then various
secondary effects must be considered. In
particular, it might be required to open also the
momentum collimators with resulting effects on
losses of off-momentum particles (synchrotron
radiation losses), abort gap cleaning etc. - The compatibility of an additional
triplet-induced off-momentum beta-beat with
collimation must be verified. - All warm and cold aperture limits must be in the
shadow of machine protection collimators,
independently of the fact that warm elements
cannot quench!