Paper |
Title |
Page |
MOP086 |
Integration, Commissioning and Cryogenics Performance of the ERL Cryomodule Installed on ALICE-ERL Facility at STFC Daresbury Laboratory, UK |
349 |
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- S.M. Pattalwar, R.K. Buckley, P.A. Corlett, P. Goudket, A.R. Goulden, A.J. May, P.A. McIntosh, A.E. Wheelhouse
STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
- S.A. Belomestnykh
BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
- A. Büchner, F.G. Gabriel, P. Michel
HZDR, Dresden, Germany
- E.P. Chojnacki, J.V. Conway, R.G. Eichhorn, G.H. Hoffstaetter, M. Liepe, H. Padamsee, P. Quigley, J. Sears, V.D. Shemelin
Cornell University (CLASSE), Cornell Laboratory for Accelerator-Based Sciences and Education, Ithaca, New York, USA
- M.A. Cordwell, T.J. Jones, L. Ma, A.J. Moss, J. Strachan
STFC/DL, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
- J.N. Corlett, D. Li, S.M. Lidia
LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
- T. Kimura
Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA
- R.E. Laxdal
TRIUMF, Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Vancouver, Canada
- J.K. Sekutowicz
DESY, Hamburg, Germany
- T.J. Smith
SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
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On successful assembly and preliminary testing of an optimised SRF cryomodule for application on ERL accelerators, which is being developed through an international collaboration the cryomodule has been installed on the 35 MeV ALICE (Accelerators and Lasers in Combined Experiments) Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) facility at STFC Daresbury Laboratory. Existing cryogenic infrastructure has a capacity to deliver approximately 120 W cooling power at 2 K, but the HOM (Higher Order Mode) absorbers, the thermal intercepts for the high power RF couplers and the radiation shield in the cryomodule are designed to be cooled (to 5 K and 80 K) with gaseous helium instead of liquid nitrogen. As a result the cryogenic infrastructure for ALICE had to be modified to meet these additional requirements. In this paper we describe our experience with the process of integration and the cryogenic commissioning, and present some initial results.
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MOP087 |
Conceptual Design of a Cryomodule for Compact Crab Cavities for Hi-Lumi LHC |
353 |
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- S.M. Pattalwar, P.A. McIntosh, A.E. Wheelhouse
STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
- G. Burt
Cockcroft Institute, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
- G. Burt
Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom
- O. Capatina
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- B.D.S. Hall
Cockcroft Institute, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom
- T.J. Jones, N. Templeton
STFC/DL, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
- T.J. Peterson
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
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A prototype Superconducting (RF) cryomodule, comprising multiple compact crab cavities is foreseen to realise a local crab crossing scheme for the “Hi-Lumi LHC”, a project launched by CERN to increase the luminosity performance of LHC. A cryomodule with two cavities will be initially installed and tested on the SPS drive accelerator at CERN to evaluate performance with high-intensity proton beams. A series of boundary conditions influence the design of the cryomodule prototype, arising from; the complexity of the cavity design, the requirement for multiple RF couplers, the close proximity to the second LHC beam pipe and the tight space constraints in the SPS and LHC tunnels. As a result, the design of the helium vessel and the cryomodule has become extremely challenging. This paper assesses some of the critical cryogenic and engineering design requirements and describes an optimised cryomodule solution for the tests with SPS.
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THP036 |
Design of a 4 Rod Crab Cavity Cryomodule System for HL-LHC |
982 |
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- G. Burt, B.D.S. Hall
Cockcroft Institute, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom
- T.J. Jones, N. Templeton
STFC/DL, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
- P.A. McIntosh, S.M. Pattalwar, A.E. Wheelhouse
STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
- T.J. Peterson
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
- L.A. Wright
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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The LHC requires compact SRF crab cavities for the HL-LHC and 3 potential solutions are under consideration. One option is to develop a 4 rod cavity utilising for quarter wave rods to maintain a dipole field. The cavity design has been developed including power and LOM/HOM couplers have been developed, as well as a conceptual design of a complete cryomodule system including ancillaries and this is presented. The cryomodule is designed to allow easy access during testing and uses a novel support system and contains the opposing beamline section to fit inside the LHC envelope.
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