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Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

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Page 1: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Radiation Levels in ALICE

Andreas Morsch

Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Page 2: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Order of Magnitude of the Problem

The ALICE design parameters together with running plans (collision systems, luminosity, running time) determine the order of magnitude of the radiation load.

Event related background which is highest in central PbPb mid-rapidity (0.01 – 100) cm-2

muon spectrometer < 0.1 cm-2

determines granularity, distance to IP and shielding However, 6 1014 particles are produced in PbPb but 4 1015 in all

planned collisions (mainly from pp and ArAr) 2 1014 particles are produced in beam-gas collisions inside the ALICE

experiments (IP +/- 20 m) 8 1014 particles enter as beam-halo

Page 3: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Order of Magnitude of the Problem

The number of charges produced at mid-rapidity in 10 years corresponds to a dose of ~0.1 – 1000 Gy in the mid-rapidity detectors.

The highest hadron fluence is dominated by primary hadrons (~1012 cm-2 in SPD) only at higher radii neutrons from secondary interactions dominate.

In the Muon Spectrometer the design particle density of 0.1 cm-2 in central PbPb extrapolated to the complete running scenario corresponds to a dose of ~1 Gy. The hadron fluence is dominated by neutrons. Assuming that the ratio n/charged particles is ~100 the highest hadron fluences are of the order of 1011 cm-2.

Page 4: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Order of Magnitude of the Problem

Electronic racks are located up to 5m from the beam line and shielded by 1-2 m of concrete Dose and hadron (neutron) fluence are expected to

be 3-5 orders of magnitude smaller than close to the beam-pipe 10-4 - 10-2 Gy 106 - 108 n/cm2

Page 5: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Simulations

Detailed results can only be obtained from simulations using transport codes Input primary particles simulated with HIJING, Pythia,

DPMJET and boundary source for beam halo Transport code: FLUKA Scaling of results performed for 10 years running

scenario

Page 6: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

10 years Running Scenario

Page 7: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Beam-Gas Interaction

ALICE zone (IP +/- 20 m) Assume H2-equivalent gas-pressure of 2 1013 molecules/m3

Most pessimistic 2 1014 molecules/m3

ALICE requirement 3 1012 molecules/m3

Beam Halo Use boundary source provided by Protvino Assumes pessimistic gas pressure estimate for LSS

approximately valid for the running in phase.

Page 8: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Detector Locations

Page 9: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Rack Locations

Page 10: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Doses and Fluences

Dose = absorbed energy / mass [J/kg] = Gy

Fluence = track length / volume [cm / cm3] = 1/cm2

Page 11: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

1 MeV n-equivalent Fluence

Page 12: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

1 MeV n-equivalent Fluence

Page 13: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

New since last presentation

ALICE Internal Note final Re-evaluation of beam-halo contribution HIP rates have been evaluated for Pb-Pb collisions,

but will be (~5 x) higher in high-luminosity Ar-Ar A priory only Muon Spectrometer can participate Which detectors/racks are concerned ?

SPD, ...

Page 14: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Doses in Mid-Rapidity Detectors

SPD1: Primary neutron fluence important

Page 15: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Neutron Fluences in Mid-Rapidity Detectors

Page 16: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Hadron Fluences in Mid-Rapidity Detectors

Page 17: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

HIP Rates

Mika Huhtinen, CMS Note 2002/11

Highly Ionizing Particles are produces by fragments from inelastic h-A interactions and can be related to the fluenceof hadrons with Ekin > 20 MeV.

100 Mip

Page 18: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

HIP Rates for PbPb MBNeutrons Neutrons ch. hadrons 10-100MIP 1000 MIP

[kHz cm**-2] [kHz cm**-2] [kHz cm**-2] [kHz cm**-2] [kHz cm**-2]SPD1 2.7E+01 1.4E+01 1.7E+02 1.8E+02 1.8E-01 1.8E-03SPD2 1.9E+01 5.8E+00 5.0E+01 5.6E+01 5.6E-02 5.6E-04SDD1 1.5E+01 1.5E+00 1.6E+01 1.7E+01 1.7E-02 1.7E-04SDD2 1.4E+01 1.1E+00 5.4E+00 6.5E+00 6.5E-03 6.5E-05SSD1 1.3E+01 8.3E-01 2.1E+00 2.9E+00 2.9E-03 2.9E-05SSD2 1.4E+01 7.1E-01 1.7E+00 2.4E+00 2.4E-03 2.4E-05

1.2E+01 4.6E-01 3.3E-01 7.9E-01 7.9E-04 7.9E-068.0E+00 1.2E-01 5.4E-02 1.8E-01 1.8E-04 1.8E-06

TRD 5.0E+00 8.3E-02 3.0E-02 1.1E-01 1.1E-04 1.1E-06TOF 3.3E+00 6.7E-02 2.2E-02 8.9E-02 8.9E-05 8.9E-07HMPID 2.7E+00 5.0E-02 1.3E-02 6.3E-02 6.3E-05 6.3E-07

Total > 20 MeVE>20 MeV

TPCinTPCout

Compare CMS/ALICE:Luminosity 1034/1027 = 107

Cross-Section 0.08/8 = 10-2

Multiplicity 8/2000 = 4e-3

Total = 400

@ r = 22 cm CMS: 2.8MHz cm-2 ALICE 6.5 kHz cm-2 ✓

Page 19: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Doses in Forward Detectors

Page 20: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Hadron Fluence in Forward Detectors

Page 21: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Radiation Load at Rack Positions

Page 22: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

LHC Gas Pressures and ALICE

Residual gas pressures in LHC are important since ALICE will run at low pp luminosity (0.1 – 3) 1030 cm-2 s-1 and nominal intensity.

Previous estimates give Up to 1 MHz/cm2 hadron flux inside beam pipe from beam

halo 12 kHz/m beam-gas interaction rate inside the experimental

region

Page 23: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

New Gas Pressure Estimates

A. Rossi and N. Hilleret, LHC PR 676 (2003) Changes with respect to previous calculations

Parameters of characteristics of TiZrV NEG coating Ion induced desorption using the “multi-gas” model Beam pumping deriving from gas ionisation and subsequent implantation

or sticking to the surface Electron induced desorption is negligible according to Operation

Scenario The photon flux on the wall coming from synchrotron radiation is

uniformly distributed along the section considered. It is believed that this overestimates the flux.

Page 24: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Operating Scenarios

In order to achieve the nominal parameters the unbaked surface of the cold vacuum system must be conditioned to lower secondary electron emission and avoid electron multiplication. It is foreseen to have three operation periods:

Machine start-up Conditioning Period After machine conditioning

Page 25: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Operating Scenario

Machine Start-Up Operation with beam current below multipacting threshold = 1/3 of

nominal intensity Conditioning

During conditioning period the beam current is gradually increased to maintain electron multipacting conditions. The electron bombardment will lower the secondary electron emission (electron conditioning).

After Conditioning Operation at nominal beam-current Electron multipacting assumed to be neglebible Materials show memory-effect . Only short reconditioning needed after

shut-down and venting.

Page 26: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004
Page 27: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Gas pressure at IP2

LHC Project Note in preparation (A. Rossi) Main conclusion: the density will be lower 1013

molecules/m3, because the beam pipe is NEG coated. Adriana has measured the electron cloud activity with NEG at the SPS and no such activity has been observed.

Page 28: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Conclusions

The radiation load in ALICE detectors and electronic racks has been studied. Contributions from interactions at the IP and beam-gas interactions have been taken into account.

Collisions for physics are the dominant source of radiation load. However, for more pessimistic assumptions on residual gas pressure the beam-gas contribution could be of equal order of magnitude.

Highest doses (several kGy) are reached in the inner SPD layer and at the inner radii of forward detectors (FMS, V0, T0).

Hadron fluences up to 4 1012 cm-2 (SPD1). The highest doses in the electronic racks are in the 10 mGy

range with n-fluences up to 109 cm-2.

Page 29: Radiation Levels in ALICE Andreas Morsch Meeting on ALICE Radiation Tolerance 30/8/2004

Conclusions

New calculations for residual gas pressure at IP and in the LSS give ~ one order of magnitude lower values. Reason: No measurable electron cloud activity from NEG coated

surfaces at the SPS Cold surfaces will be conditioned (“scrubbing”)

according using an operation scenario that avoids electron cloud activity.