Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Jan 2019)

Experiment exposing refractory metals to impacts of 440  GeV/c proton beams for the future design of the CERN antiproton production target: Experiment design and online results

  • Claudio Torregrosa Martin,
  • Antonio Perillo-Marcone,
  • Marco Calviani,
  • Luca Gentini,
  • Mark Butcher,
  • José-Luis Muñoz-Cobo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.22.013401
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
p. 013401

Abstract

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The HRMT27-RodTarg experiment employed the HiRadMat facility at CERN to impact intense 440 GeV proton beams onto thin rods 8 mm in diameter, 140 mm in length, and made of high-density materials such as Ir, W, Ta, Mo, and alloys. The purpose of the experiment was to reduce uncertainties on the CERN antiproton target material response and assess the material selection for its future redesign. The experiment was designed to recreate the extreme conditions reached in the production target, estimated in an increase of temperature above 2000 °C in less than 0.5 μs and a subsequent compressive-to-tensile pressure wave of several gigapascals. The goals of the experiment were (i) to validate the hydrocode calculations used for the prediction of the antiproton target response and (ii) to identify limits and failure mechanisms of the materials of interest. In order to accomplish these objectives, the experiment relied on extensive instrumentation (pointing at the target rod surfaces). This paper presents a detailed description of the experiment as well as the recorded online results which showed that most of the investigated materials suffered internal damage from conditions 5–7 times below the ones present in the AD target. Tantalum, on the other hand, apparently withstood the most extreme conditions without presenting internal cracking.