Summary notes of the LCU meeting on 07/04/2009
Present: MA, GB, CB, HB, SF, MG, WH, JJ, EL, FS, YS, RT, Daniela Macina, Rob Appleby, DW.
Report from meetings
Status of aperture studies for replacing the y-shaped vacuum chamber in IR2 -> MG (pdf) and Rob Appleby (pdf)
MG introduced the subject. Closing the vertical tertiary collimators TCTVB around ALICE to protect the triplet reduces the acceptance for neutrons in the forward region (ZDC). The collimators could be opened to not cut into the acceptance but this would reduce the triplet protection (even though no failure scenario in the vertical plane is known).
An alternative would be to displace the y-shaped vacuum chamber to
install the ZDC upstream of the TCTVB. The issue is whether this displacement
will have an impact on the aperture and whether such an impact is acceptable or
the vacuum chamber should be modified.
IP2 also has the injection of beam 1. Aperture considerations have to cover also failure scenarios. This is currently followed up by
Jan Uythoven (who prepared the slides showed by MG). The main failure scenario at injection is kicker misfiring,
i.e., injected beam not kicked, or circulating beam kicked. A similar analysis
was already performed as the y-shaped vacuum chamber had to be modified already
once to increase its aperture. The aperture bottleneck for the failure scenarios
remains D2. The y-shaped vacuum chamber, whenever displaced, becomes a second
aperture limit. The maximum displacement is 2.5 m for which the n1 drops to
about 5. An optimized integration, resulting in a reduced displacement, would be
helpful, as with 1 m displacement, only n1 is 7.6. In all the computations
performed by Jan the mechanical tolerances are 1 mm in
horizontal and vertical planes. Jan estimated the increase in
the chamber size (injection leg) to restore a decent beam aperture: as the
distance between the two legs cannot be reduced too much, an increase of the
vertical size is needed to gain some aperture in the horizontal one.
Rob Appleby showed studies of the aperture at IP2
in terms of n1 for the nominal and longitudinally displaced y-chamber. Aperture
is most critical at injection. The mechanical tolerance is 4 mm (radial). There
was some discussion on the definition of n1 and if it would be justified to
assume a reduced alignment tolerance of only 1 mm at critical elements at
injection.
A preliminary conclusion was that one should really consider a modified
y-chamber for the left side of IP2. The right side is not affected by injection
failure scenarios and might be left as it is (apart from the displacement).
Daniela Macina said she is in contact with the collimation team and the vacuum group to see if the TCTs could be displaced.
SF suggested to re-optimize the crossing scheme to gain in aperture.
The subject will be followed up and more should be known by the time of the next LCU meeting.
AOB
None
Last update: 17-April-09
MG & HB
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