Operational%20Experience%20at%20FNAL - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Operational%20Experience%20at%20FNAL

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Quantify spot size vs. pbar yield relationship for spot sizes below s=0.15 mm ... Iridium. Target Material. Pbar Target Station - Hurh. 12 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Operational%20Experience%20at%20FNAL


1
Operational Experience at FNALsAntiproton
Source Target Station
  • Patrick Hurh
  • BENE Meeting
  • November 3, 2004

2
Aerial photograph of Pbar Source
3
Pbar Target Vault
4
Workers in target vault
5
Lithium Lens
6
Single-turn 3-degree pulsed magnet
7
Gear drive target assembly
8
Target stack showing cooling disk
9
Pbar target assembly presently in use
Graphite Tantalum Graphite
10
Preparing for more protons on target
  • Beam Studies
  • Quantify spot size vs. pbar yield relationship
    for spot sizes below s0.15 mm
  • Look for evidence of yield reduction due to
    melting
  • Attempt to create single pulse damage to copper
    disk
  • Alternative target material
  • Identify target materials that are superior to
    Nickel in longevity while minimizing the loss of
    normalized yield
  • Examine damage to old targets
  • Beam Sweeping
  • Create sweeping system to reduce peak energy
    deposition in the target
  • Consider deferring final installation and
    commissioning of beam sweeping until it is
    necessary operationally

11
Target material comparison
Target Material Iridium Rhenium Tungsten Nickel Copper
A1/3/r (m3/Kg) .255 .271 .295 .437 .445
A1/3/r (Normalized) 1.71 1.61 1.48 1 .98
Observed Yield (Normalized) 1.05 1 .99
Melting Point Energy (J/g) 460 610 630 1,250 770
Yield Strength (MPa) 160 270 500 230 72
Gruneisen parameter (MPa Kg/J) 80.6 66.0 31.0 15.8 17.2
12
Energy deposition vs. peak target temperature
13
Apparent target depletion due to melting
14
Damage to Tungsten-Rhenium target
15
Damage to Tungsten target
16
Early target assembly
5e11 ppp s.35 mm
17
Holes in Copper Target
1e12 ppp s.35 mm
18
Bulges on titanium target cover
3e12 ppp s.2 mm
19
Target damage to nickel target (entry)
3e12 ppp s.2 mm
20
Target damage to nickel target (exit)
3e12 ppp s.2 mm
21
Damage to titanium cover and nickel target
5e12 ppp s.15 mm
22
Target R2 T2 with graphite cover and Stainless
304 damage
23
Pbar yield and peak energy deposition vs. spot
size
McLens and CASIM Models
Nickel target, 5E12 protons
24
Comparison of model and data yield curves
25
Summary of target material endurance study
Material Spot size Starting Yield Ending Yield Protons On target Yield reduction Scaled to 1018 protons
Nickel 200 ?xy 0.15, 0.16 1.000 0.970 5.7 x 1017 5.3
Nickel 200 ?xy 0.22, 0.16 0.990 0.935 6.6 x 1017 8.3
Inconel? 600 ?xy 0.15, 0.16 0.995 0.970 10.6 x 1017 2.4
Inconel? 600 ?xy 0.22, 0.16 0.990 0.960 10.7 x 1017 2.8
Inconel? 625 ?xy 0.22, 0.16 0.980 0.970 6.6 x 1017 1.5
Inconel? X-750 ?xy 0.15, 0.16 0.985 0.965 5.7 x 1017 3.5
Inconel? 686 ?xy 0.15, 0.16 0.970 0.935 1.0 x 1017 38.2
Stainless 304 ?xy 0.15, 0.16 1.000 0.965 6.1 x 1017 5.8
26
Upstream sweeping magnets installed in AP-1 line
27
Present beam parameters for pbar target
  • Proton beam energy is 120 GeV, pulse length 1.6
    µs
  • Beam spot size is s 0.15 mm
  • Duty cycle varies from 0.5 to 0.2 Hz
  • Beam intensity continues to increase
  • Average proton intensity on target 6.5E12, peak
    7.1E12
  • Both Inconel 600 and Stainless 304 targets used
    at this intensity
  • Estimated average energy deposition in Inconel
    600 1,600 J/g (189 J/cc)
  • Target disk lifetime is about 2 months under
    these conditions
  • Target assembly is made up of 6 target disks

28
Tantalum target test summary (1)
  • Goal was to create enough target damage to reduce
    pbar/p- yield
  • Started with a proton intensity of 1.0E11 and a
    spot size of s 0.50 mm. Maximum energy
    deposition was attained with a proton intensity
    of 6.5E12 and a spot size of s 0.15 mm
  • Target rotation was stopped so that beam pulses
    were accumulated in the same area
  • After accumulating 100 beam pulses, energy
    deposition was increased by a factor of 2 and
    process repeated
  • Target rotated 10 between data points

29
Tantalum target test summary (2)
  • Goal was to create enough target damage to reduce
    pbar/p- yield
  • Target did not show appreciable pbar/p- yield
    reduction up to maximum energy deposition
  • 1,100 pulses with proton intensities of
    5.8-6.5E12
  • Energy deposition estimated at 2,300 J/g (38,300
    J/cc)
  • Tantalum target had 8 lower pbar/ p- yield as
    compared with nickel (model predicted a few
    percent higher)

30
Pbar target and beam sweeping, Summary
  • Pbar Target and Beam Sweeping
  • Inconel 600 identified as operational target
    material
  • Although Stainless 304 is a close second
  • There appears to be no benefit in reducing spot
    sizes to the original goal of s 0.10 mm
  • Beam studies show spot sizes below s 0.15 mm
    produce little or no increase in antiproton yield
    (contrary to predictions from models)
  • Target damage and yield reduction are not as
    severe as expected at small spot sizes

31
Pbar target and beam sweeping, Summary
  • Pbar Target and Beam Sweeping
  • Single pulse target damage observed with copper
  • Energy deposition a factor of 2.5 above that
    required for the onset of melting
  • Yield reduction from target melting has not been
    observed
  • Upstream beam sweeping system has been tested
    with beam (downstream system nearly ready for
    installation)
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