大型强子对撞机电阻板室实验运行的最佳气体系统

M. Capeans, I. Glushkov, R. Guida, S. Haider, F. Hahn, S. Rouwette
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在大型强子对撞机(LHC)的ATLAS和CMS实验中,电阻板室(rpc)覆盖了约4000 m2的表面,相当于16 m3的气体体积。使用相对昂贵的氟利昂(R134a)基气体混合物使得它们不可避免地在闭环气体系统中运行。研究发现,在与大型强子对撞机类似的背景条件下运行的rpc返回气体中含有大量杂质,这对这些系统的长期运行具有潜在的危险。在过去几年中,在欧洲核子研究中心伽马辐照设施(GIF)的强辐射场中运行了几台rpc,以便研究主要是氟离子、氟里昂族分子和碳氢化合物的典型杂质的产生。还对清洗剂进行了系统的表征。此外,测试提出了一种优化的过滤器配置,目前正在GIF设置中进行长期验证。新的过滤器配置优化了对H2O, O2和RPC典型杂质的过滤能力。新配置的一个重要特点是增加了每个净化器的循环持续时间,这导致更好的系统稳定性,减少系统停机时间,如果需要,它允许在LHC高亮度运行期间舒适地增加检测器中的气体流量。在过滤优化研究的基础上,对rpc内的气流分布进行了有限元模拟,以实现其最终的优化。对RPC气体分布标准配置的初步研究表明,气体速度比其他区域低10-100倍。每4小时气体流量为1体积交换(考虑无辐射安全操作的下限),这些区域约占整个探测器表面的三分之一。当气体流量减小时,这些区域的延伸急剧增加。为了实验量化这些关键区域对探测器性能的影响,并验证是否可以找到一个新的、更有效的解决方案,建立了一个具有灵活分布的气体入口和出口的新型RPC原型。其基本思想是,气体速度非常低的区域定义了探测器运行所需的总体气体流量。有效地去除RPC体积内的“用过的”气体混合物可以降低总气体流速,从而降低大型气体系统的运行成本,而不会影响RPC检测器的性能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Optimal gas system for the operation of Resistive Plate Chambers at the Large Hadron Collider experiments
Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs) cover a surface of about 4000 m2, equivalent to 16 m3 of gas volume both in ATLAS and CMS experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). The use of a relatively expensive Freon (R134a) — based gas mixture makes unavoidable their operation in closed-loop gas systems. It has been observed that the return gas of RPCs operated in background conditions similar to those foreseen at LHC contains a large amount of impurities, which are potentially dangerous for the long-term operation of these systems. During the past few years several RPCs have been operated in the intense radiation field of the CERN Gamma Irradiation Facility (GIF) in order to study the production of typical impurities, mainly fluoride ions, molecules of the Freon group and hydrocarbons. A systematic characterization of cleaning agents has also been performed. Moreover, the tests suggest an optimized configuration of filters, currently under long-term validation at the GIF set-up. The new filter configuration optimizes the filtering capacity for H2O, O2 and RPC typical impurities. An important feature of the new configuration is the increase of the cycle duration for each purifier, that results in better system stability, reduced system downtime and, if needed, it permits to increase comfortably the gas flow in the detectors during the high luminosity running periods at LHC. The filtering optimization studies are complemented with a finite element simulation of the gas flow distribution in the RPCs, aiming at its eventual optimization. A preliminary study on the standard configuration for the RPC gas distribution shows regions in which the gas velocity is 10–100 times lower than in others. With a gas flow of 1 volume exchange every 4 hours (considered the lower limit for a safe operation without radiation) these regions represent about one third of the whole detector surface. The extension of these areas increases dramatically when decreasing the gas flow. A new RPC prototype with a flexible distribution of gas inlets and outlets has been built in order to experimentally quantify the impact of those critical regions on the detector performance and also to verify if a new, more effective solution can be found. The basic idea is that the regions with very low gas velocity define the overall gas flow needed for the detector operation. An efficient removal of the “used” gas mixture inside the RPC volume would permit the reduction of the overall gas flow rate and thus would cut down the operation cost of the large gas systems, without affecting the RPC detector's performance.
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