2–5 May 2023
SLAC
America/Los_Angeles timezone

High-Power Targetry R&D for Next-Generation Accelerator Facilities

4 May 2023, 16:20
5m
SLAC

SLAC

2575 Sand Hill Rd Menlo Park, CA 94025
Not Early Career Scientist Contributed Remarks

Speaker

Frederique Pellemoine (Fermilab)

Description

As next-generation accelerator target facilities, for Neutrino Program such as the Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF) or Muon Program such as Mu2e-II at Fermilab, become increasingly more powerful and intense, high power target systems face key technical challenges. Beam-intercepting devices such as beam windows and secondary particle-production targets are continuously bombarded by high-energy high-intensity pulsed proton beams to produce secondary particles for several High Energy Physics (HEP) experiments. Energy deposition from the primary beam induces near instantaneous heating (thermal shock) and microstructural changes (radiation damage) in the beam-intercepting materials. Both thermal shock and radiation damage ultimately degrade the performance and lifetime of targets and have been identified as the leading cross-cutting challenges of high-power target facilities. Several facilities have already had to limit their beam power because of the survivability of their targets and windows, rather than as a limitation of the accelerators themselves. As beam power in next-generation multi-megawatt accelerator target facilities continue to increase, there is a pressing need to address the material challenges to avoid limiting the scope of future HEP experiments. This talk will highlight the critical materials R&D needs to address the challenges of high-power targets.

Primary authors

Frederique Pellemoine (Fermilab) Dr Kavin Ammigan (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory)

Presentation materials