Title: Status of energy deposition studies IR7
1Status of energy deposition studies IR7
- A. Ferrari, M. Magistris, M. Santana, M. Silari,
V. Vlachoudis
Review of the LHC Collimation Project 30 June 2
July 2004
2Overview
- Introduction to beam collimation
- Main issues to be studied
- New features of FLUKA
- Implementation of the geometry
- Future work
- This talk is a status report of a work in
progress. No results are available at the moment.
- The FLUKA input is ready and debugged,
simulations are starting the first week of July.
3Two warm LHC insertions dedicated to cleaning
IR3, IR7
- Collimation systems
- Momentum and betatron cleaning
- Two beams
4Principle of beam collimation
Cleaning with collimators (warm)
IR7
RR
RR
Dispersion suppressor (SC)
p,e,p
p,e,p
p,e,p
Beam 1
Primary collimators Damage?
Secondary collimators Damage?
SC magnets Quench?
5Issues to be studied
- Energy deposition in collimators and downstream
- Damage to equipment in cleaning insertions
- Energy deposition in SC magnets in DS section
- Damage/perturbation to electronic equipment and
cables - Position of absorbers to cure problems
- These issues can be studied by means of the MC
cascade code FLUKA.
6FLUKA physics
- Physical models available for cross-checking
- FLUKA standard model
- DPMJET 2.5
- DPMJET 3
- Possibility of simulating ions
- Single scattering for incident particles at
grazing angle
7FLUKA geometry
- New features of the latest version
- repetition of objects according to symmetry
transformation (rotation, translation,
reflection, or combination of these). - assignment of names to bodies and regions.
- These features allow implementing a complex
geometry with a modular approach.
8Advantages of the modular approach
- Time optimisation
- IR7 (more than 200 major components) can be
implemented with less than 20 prototypes. - Maintenance
- Any improvement in the prototype geometry applies
to all replica in the tunnel. - A new component can be added without modification
of the existing geometry. - Avoid duplicating efforts
- Every module can be used or modified by different
users for future studies.
9Prototypes
Collimators, dipoles, quadrupoles, sextupoles,
multipoles
MB
MQT
10Reflection MQW Vertical and Horizontal
11Rotation and run-time corrections Primary and
secondary collimators
- Rotation around the beam direction and the
vertical axis - Jaw material (carbon, metal)
- Collimation gap and misalignment (run-time)
12Additional components
- Beam Loss Monitors (air volume).
- Vacuum pipes (need for definition of bake-out
equipment close to pipe ? AT/VAC). - Tunnel walls and estimates for cables.
- Electronic equipment in RRs (K. Tsoulou).
13A flexible geometry
- The magnetic fields and the beam loss
distribution are described in user written
routines. - A specifically written program creates
automatically the full geometry from an on-line
file. - Any change in component position, collimator
rotation or jaw misalignment is automatically
implemented. - With minimal modifications, the same program can
be used to implement different sections of LHC.
14Special techniques and physics options
- Biasing techniques (Russian roulette,
splitting, leading particle biasing and region
importance) - Energy threshold
- Electromagnetic cascade
- Particles to be tracked
- These options must be defined by the user
according to the specific case studied.
15IR7, Straight section
16Summary
- Large initial effort to set up flexible and
complete model of IR7 and cold dispersion
suppressor. - The straight section of IR7 is fully implemented.
- Prototypes and magnetic field of all components
in DS have been implemented ? adjusting
positions. - Full simulations starting first week of July.
- First complete picture end of July.
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