Title: ILC Target Vault Fluka Calculations
1ILC Target Vault Fluka Calculations
2Questions
- Incoming energy is 280 kW for a conventional
source and 220 kW for a undulator-based source - Where does this energy go
- How much into the L-band, vault air, vault ..
- Can we use a superconducting Adiabatic Matching
Device
3Copper cavity
Iron dump
Drive Beam
Aluminium solenoid
Boron shield
Tungsten shield
Tungsten or titanium target
50 cm
2.5 cm
50 cm
90 cm
Iron pre-beam dump 50cmX50cmX90cm
50 cm
200 cm
Iron inner Outer beam dumps CYLINDRICAL GEOMETRY
Beam pipe surrounded by 1 cm copper pipe (4
sections) 9cm W, 5 cm B, 5 cmW, 5cm B, 5cm W, 5cm
B, 5cm W, 5cm B CYLINDRICAL GEOMETRY
Target disk 1.2cm W or 1.42cm Ti
TARGET STATION (surrounded by 3 m thick concrete
vault at /- 7 m in x,y,z)
4Target Station Layout
- Target disk 1 m in diameter, 1.2 cm of W (4 rl)
or 1.42 cm of Ti (.4rl) - Prebeam dump is an iron box 50 cm x 50 cm x 90cm
(along beam axis) - Inner dump 5 cm iron cylinder, 50 cm long, 2
meters from target - Outer dump 1 m iron cylinder, 50 cm long, 2
meters from target (minus the inner dump) - Cavity is 1 cm thick copper pipe 2 meters long
in between the target and inner/outer dumps - Shield is alternating pipes of W and B, 5 cm
thick except the first W layer which is 9 cm
thick. Shield goes from 3.5 to 47.5 cm in radius
and is 2 m long - Solenoid is 2.5 cm thick Al pipe 2 meters long
5FLUKA RUNS
- Conventional 6.2 GeV electrons, 280kW beam
power, 4 rl W target - Conventional 6.2 GeV electrons, 280kW beam
power, 4 rl W target, 2.5 tesla magnetic field
between target and beam dump and inside solenoid - Conventional 6.2 GeV electrons, 280kW beam
power, 4 rl W target, 2.5 tesla magnetic field
between target and beam dump and inside solenoid
and 5 cm thick L-band pipe - Undulator 2-10 MeV photons, flat distribution,
220 kW beam power, 0.4 rl Ti target - Undulator 50 MeV photons, 220 kW beam power,
0.4 rl Ti target - Undulator 2-10 MeV photons, flat distribution,
220 kW beam power, 0.4 rl Ti target, solid
tungsten shield
6Conventional 6.2 GeV electrons, 280kW beam
power, 4 rl W target
7Conventional 6.2 GeV electrons, 280kW beam
power, 4 rl W target, 2.5 tesla magnetic field
between target and beam dump and inside solenoid
8Conventional 6.2 GeV electrons, 280kW beam
power, 4 rl W target, 2.5 tesla magnetic field
between target and beam dump and inside solenoid
and 5 cm thick L-band pipe
9Undulator 2-10 MeV photons, flat distribution,
220 kW beam power, 0.4 rl Ti target
10Undulator 50 MeV photons, 220 kW beam power,
0.4 rl Ti target
11Undulator 2-10 MeV photons, flat distribution,
220 kW beam power, 0.4 rl Ti target, solid
tungsten shield
12Undulator 2-10 MeV photons, flat distribution,
220 kW beam power, 0.4 rl Ti target, closer
pre-beam shield
13COMMENTS
- At the gross level calculations make sense
- Undulator based positron production is more
forward peaked and does not produce neutrons - Solenoid can be shielded energy depositions
are a fraction of a watt (use of an SC device may
be feasible) - Lot of energy deposited in the l-band, in the
case of electrons this energy deposition is
equivalent to the dump - About 100-200 watts of energy makes it to the
vault/vault air. Photons seem to deposit more at
the vault than electrons. I think that it is
because more energy flows backwards from the
target and the pre-beam shield is not optimal.
This needs to be understood.
14Follow-on Studies
- Fluka Calculations
- Better shield, cheaper shield, better layout,
more realistic layout - When can on transition to SC L-band
- Radiation damage
- What does deposited EM energy do
- Is deposited neutron energy different/worse
- Solenoid
- What field/field profile can be made with an SC
device - Field/field profile vs. positron capture
- L-band
- Reasonable gradient vs. duty factor vs. MWs
- Gradient vs. positron capture