Engineering Specification Template



+Document Approval:Date ApprovedOriginator: Tom Peterson, Fermilab DRAFTApprover Name, TitleDRAFTRevision HistoryRevisionDate ReleasedDescription of ChangeR0Month Day, YearOriginal Release.Table of Contents TOC \o "1-1" \h \z \u 1Scope PAGEREF _Toc407960060 \h 22Introduction PAGEREF _Toc407960061 \h 23Definitions PAGEREF _Toc407960062 \h 44References PAGEREF _Toc407960063 \h 55Responsibilities PAGEREF _Toc407960064 \h 66Functional requirements summary PAGEREF _Toc407960065 \h 67Cryomodule mechanical design PAGEREF _Toc407960066 \h 78Cryomodule vacuum design PAGEREF _Toc407960067 \h 109Cryomodule thermal design and helium flow design PAGEREF _Toc407960068 \h 1010Cryomodule helium inventory PAGEREF _Toc407960069 \h 1611What else? PAGEREF _Toc407960070 \h 16ScopeThis document describes the technical requirements and design for the 1.3 GHz cryomodules for LCLS-II. Introduction The LCLS-II main linac cryomodule is based on the existing XFEL design, including TESLA-style superconducting accelerating cavities with modifications to accommodate CW operation and LCLS-II beam parameters. Cryomodules contain superconducting cavities together with cryogenic distribution lines and thermal shielding, and are assembled in a small number of strings without breaks between individual cryomodules. At the downstream end of each 1.3 GHz cryomodule are focusing and steering magnets and a beam position monitor. Beam line higher-order-mode (HOM) absorbers are located in the cold sections between cryomodules. The cavity tuners, HOM couplers, and fundamental power couplers are also developed from existing designs. Cryogenic transfer lines are required only where bypasses for warm sections of the linac must be provided. The 1.3 GHz cryomodules contain eight RF cavities each. Active control of the cavity resonant frequency is provided by an end-lever tuner with motor and piezo-driven components. Each RF cavity is independently powered through a fundamental power coupler with variable Qext connected via air-filled waveguide to a solid state amplifier at 1.3 GHz. Cryogenic circuits provide 2 K liquid helium to the cavities with a valve for liquid supply in each cryomodule. The cryostat includes a second valve and piping for cool-down of cavities in an individual cryomodule, a nominally 5 K thermal intercept circuit, and a nominally 45 K thermal radiation shield and thermal intercept circuit. Cryogenic heat load is dominated by dynamic RF heating of approximately 10 W per cavity. Figure 1 illustrates the cryomodule cross-section and cryogenic circuit labels. Figure 2 shows the cryomodule flow scheme. Figure 3 illustrates the cryomodule mechanical assembly. Figure 1. LCLS-II cryomodule assembly cross-sectionFigure 2. LCLS-II 1.3 GHz cryomodule schematicFigure 3. LCLS-II 1.3 GHz cryomodule assemblyDefinitionsTable 1. DefinitionsTermDefinitionSLAC SLAC National Accelerator LaboratoryFNALFermi National Accelerator LaboratoryLCLS-IILinac Coherent Light Source upgradeSRFSuperconducting Radio Frequency CW Continuous Wave operating modeTESLATeV Energy Superconducting Linear Accelerator – the predecessor to the ILC concept, developed collaboratively by DESY, Saclay, INFN, Fermilab, JLab, Cornell, and other labs and universities under the leadership of DESY. The LCLS-II cryomodule configuration (RF cavities in close-fitting helium vessels suspended from a large helium return pipe, cryogenic piping all within the cryostat) comes from the TESLA collaboration. Hence it is referred to here as TESLA-style. XFELX-ray Free Electron Laser, an SRF linac under construction at DESY which includes TESLA-style cryomodules2 KNominally 2 Kelvin temperature level, which may be 1.8 K to 2.1 K5 KNominally 5 Kelvin temperature level, which may be 5.0 K to 8.0 K45 KNominally 45 Kelvin temperature level, which may be 30 K to 80 K. (We expect around 35 K to 55 K in the linac, but this cryogenic circuit and thermal shield will be ~80 K in test facilities with LN2.)MAWP Maximum Allowable Working Pressure, a term that is used to define the safe pressure rating of a component or test systemCold massThose portions of the cryomodule within the vacuum vessel which are cooler than room-temperature – RF cavities, piping, thermal shield, etc. HGRPHelium Gas Return Pipe, the 300 mm diameter helium pipe which also serves as the structural backbone of the cold massMLIMulti-Layer Insulation, or “superinsulation”, aluminized mylar wrapped in layers alternately with a conductively insulating material in the insulating vacuum space to block thermal radiation References Table 2. References#Associated Document(s) Reference NumberDocument TitleSLAC documents1LCLSII-4.1-PR-0146-R0Cryomodule Physics Requirements Document, 1.3 GHz Cryomodule2LCLSII-2.4-PR-0136Beam Position Monitor Physics Requirements Document3LCLSII-2.5-FR-0053-R0Cryomodule Functional Requirements Specification, 1.3 GHz Cryomodule4LCLSII-4.5-ES-0055-R0"Engineering Specifications Document, Fundamental Power Coupler"5LCLSII-4.5-EN-0179-R0Engineering Note, “Cryomodule Heat Load” 6LCLS-II-4.5-EN-0186-R0Engineering Note, “Cryogenic System – Cryomodule Design Methodology”7LCLSII-4.5-EN-0221Tuner electro-mechanical design8LCLS-II-4.5-EN-0310-R0A Study of Magnetic Shielding Performance of a Fermilab International Linear Collider Superconducting RF Cavity Cryomodule9LCLSII-EN-0286-R0Vacuum System Safety Plan 10LCLSII-2.5-IC-0056-R1“Interface Control Document, Accelerator Systems to Cryogenic Systems”11LCLSII-4.5-IC-0237-R0“Interface Control Document, Fundamental Power Coupler” 12SLAC-I-720-0A24E-001Seismic Design Specification for Buildings, Structures, Equipment and Systems: 2014Fermilab documents13F10009945Assembly, 1.3GHz Cryomodule LCLS-II (drawing) 14F10022915LCLS-II Prototype Cryomodule P&ID (drawing)15ED0001152Master Spreadsheet 1.3GHz CM-LCLS-II16ED0002342Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Vacuum Vessel17ED-0002307"Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Interfaces" 18ED0001196Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Prototype Cavity Magnetic Shield Specification19ED0002361Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule HGRP20ED0002339Fermilab Engineering Note, LCLS-II Cryomodule Vacuum Vessel ASME Code Conformance21Fermilab draft documentLCLS-II 1.3GHz Prototype Cryomodule Instrumentation List22Fermilab draft documentLCLS-II Magnet Package Design, Fabrication, and tests, by Vladimir Kashikhin, May 6, 2014 23Fermilab draft documentValve sizing document 24Fermilab draft documentPiping pressure drops and venting analyses 25Fermilab draft documentDraft FESHM-style piping engineering note26Fermilab draft documentElectric heater sizing, design, implementation engineering noteOther reference documents and publications27TESLA report #94-18 (June, 1994).“Notes about the Limits of Heat Transport from a TESLA Helium Vessel with a Nearly Closed Saturated Bath of Helium II”, by Tom Peterson, Fermilab28REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS 81, 074701 (2010). O. Kugeler, A. Neumann, W. Anders, and J. Knobloch, Helmholtz-Zentrum-Berlin (HZB), 12489 Berlin, Germany, “Adapting TESLA technology for future cw light sources using HoBiCaT”29Advances in Cryogenic Engineering, Vol 43B, pp. 1441 - 1448"Latest Developments on He II Co-current Two-phase Flow Studies," by B. Rousset, A. Gauthier, L. Grimaud, and R. van Weelderen, in Advances in Cryogenic Engineering, Vol 43B (1997 Cryogenic Engineering Conference).Responsibilities Table 3. ResponsibilitiesPerson(s) or Areas ResponsibleDefine ResponsibilityFunctional requirements summaryThe cryomodule functional requirements are defined in "The 1.3 GHz Superconducting Cryomodule Functional Requirements Specification Document," [reference 2]. This Technical Requirements Document expands on those functional requirements by providing in-depth descriptions of design features and by pointing to references which describe the detailed analyses or design work. The following table provides a summary of the key functional requirements which drive the design. Table 4. Key functional requirements for the cryomodulesKey requirementDescriptionSeries configurationThe baseline design concept includes TESLA-style cryomodules with insulating vacuum open at each end to the next, so connected insulating vacuums, and with cold beam pipe through the interconnect. No external parallel transfer lineTESLA-style cryomodules include all cryogenic piping within the cryostat, as opposed to having a parallel external cryogenic transfer line to supply cooling to cryomodules 0.5% longitudinal tunnel slopeThe SLAC tunnel enclosure, in which the cryomodules will be installed, has a 0.5% longitudinal floor slope, which dictates careful attention to liquid helium management Quality, reliabilityProvide high reliability in all aspects of the cryomodule (vacuum, alignment stability, mechanics, instrumentation) including after thermal cyclesMicrophonicsMinimize cavity vibration and coupling of external sources to cavitiesAlignmentProvide good cavity alignment (<0.5 mm RMS)Seismic Follow SLAC seismic loading requirements Thermal efficiencyIntercept significant heat loads at intermediate temperatures above 2.0 K to the extent possible in full CW operationPressure safetyCryomodules and components comply with 10CFR851 – equivalence to pressure code safety level. Protect the helium and vacuum spaces including the RF cavity from exceeding maximum allowable pressures (MAWP).Magnetic shieldingProvide excellent magnetic shielding to preserve high Q0Other requirementsA few additional requirements not explicitly in the FRSThermal performanceAllow removal of up to 150 W at 2 K per cryomodule. (For thermal design within the cryomodule, we apply a larger uncertainty factor than globally for cryoplant sizing.) Cool-down Provide, to the extent possible given the cryomodule string configuration, cool-down conditions which retain high cavity Q0. Recent recognition of the role of thermal gradient on the niobium cavity to “sweep out” magnetic flux as the Nb passes through the superconducting transition during cool-down created new design goals for management of cool-down, including the addition of a cool-down valve in each cryomodule. Cryomodule mechanical designCryomodule major components and featuresLCLS-II cryomodules consist of various complex subassemblies, some of which are taken from previous TESLA-style cryomodule designs and some of which are new developments for LCLS-II and CW operation. The table below lists major cryomodule features or components, notes about each, and reference documents describing them in detail. Table 5. Major cryomodule features or components FeatureNotesRef #RF cavityILC cavity shapeHelium vesselModified “chimney nozzle for CW heat removal and provision of two symmetrically located cool-down / warm-up supply ports3, 5, 13,15TunerEnd-lever tuner designed for stiffness, precise tuning, piezo integration, and accessibility. The overall tuner envelope must not interfere with other features like piping. Tuner will be accessible without disassembly of the cryomodule. The cryomodule will have ports on the vacuum vessel providing access to each tuner. Tuner cabling is routed to avoid damage. Cables are thermally intercepted at the 45 K level.3, 7RF power input couplerModified for CW operation. The cryomodule includes features to accommodate the input coupler assembly including input coupler flange on the vacuum vessel and features to support any associated assembly tooling. Maximum motion of the cold flange on the cavity relative to the warm flange on the vacuum vessel is [need these numbers]. Input coupler thermal intercepts are provided at 45 K and at 5 K. 3, 4Magnet assemblySplit magnet (consisting of quadrupole and two dipole correctors) for assembly onto the beam pipe after cavity string assembly, outside of the clean room. 3, 22Beam Position Monitor3, 245 K thermal shieldServes both as a thermal radiation shield and as a conductive manifold for thermal intercepts. 13Magnetic shieldingMagnetic shielding goal is to limit imposed magnetic field on the dressed cavity to no more than 5 milligauss. One must watch also for internal sources of magnetic fields. No component of the cryomodule shall impose a magnetic field of more than 5 milligauss on the dressed RF cavity. 18Cryogenic valvesA major difference from XFEL is the addition of two cryogenic valves to each cryomodule, one for cool-down of each cryomodule individually and one for steady-state management of helium liquid levels in each cryomodule individually. 23Cryogenic pipingStresses in piping and support structures include those due to pressure loads and shall not exceed allowable stresses. Piping stability with respect to loads, taking into account forces resulting from the use of bellows, piping area changes, etc., is analyzed and verified.24, 25Cold mass supports Epoxy-fiberglass cylinders of the TESLA design support the cryomodule cold mass13Cavity support systemLike for TESLA and XFEL, RF cavities are anchored in position axially via a clamp to an invar rod. Vertical and lateral support is provided by the 300 mm HGRP which in turn hangs from the vacuum vessel via three support posts.13, 15Vacuum vesselED0002342, Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Vacuum Vessel16, 17InstrumentationAn instrumentation list is found in the Cryomodule Interfaces Document , ED-000230714, 17, 21Cryomodule linac lattice dimensionsCryomodule linac lattice dimensions and intercavity spacing including both warm and cold dimensions are defined and shown in ED0001152. Two key dimensions given are: main coupler cavity-to-cavity distance is 1383.6 mm, which is 6 lambda (at 1.3 GHz), and cryomodule slot length is 12,220 mm (53 lambda). These even wavelength requirements come from the Cryomodule Physics Requirements Document. 1, 14, 15Major interfaces Major interfaces from the cryomodule to other linac components are described in "Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Interfaces" [ref 17]. Table 6. Major interfacesInterfaceNotesRefVacuum vessel support structure The support of the vacuum vessel in the SLAC tunnel is described in detail in “Interface Control Document, Accelerator Systems to Cryogenic Systems” [ref 10]10, 16, 17Connections at the cryomodule string ends to the distribution system With the exception of the single cryomodule in L0, for which detailed specifications are still under development, cryomodule ends at string ends are standard interconnects. 13, 15RF waveguide to input couplers RF power input waveguide connections are described in detail in "Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Interfaces" [ref 17]. 17Instrumentation connectors on the vacuum shell Electrical connectors are located on various round cover plates mounted on the vacuum shell, the connector plates sealed with O-ring seals. A pair of instrumentation flanges is also associated with each input coupler to reduce wire lengths and risks associated with long runs of wires inside the cryomodule. 13, 14, 17Power to the magnet current leads Current leads are to be designed for 50 amps current, although current varies from very low levels at the low energy end of the linac to about 20 amps at the high energy end. 22Alignment fiducials on the vacuum shell with reference to cavity positions. Alignment fiducials on the vacuum shell are described in detail in "Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Interfaces" [ref 17]. 17Cavity alignment requirements relative to external reference Cavity lateral and vertical alignment requirements are 0.5 mm (RMS). Cavity positions relative to fiducials on the vacuum vessel are set during assembly with no requirement for later internal adjustment of cavity position within the cryomodule after assembly. Alignment needs to be maintained with thermal and pressure cycling. (Return to position within 0.5 mm RMS tolerance.) Final alignment is of the vacuum vessel assembly by means of the external fiducials which were referenced to the cavity string. The table below summarizes approximate allocation of alignment tolerances, illustrating that for each source of misalignment, due to their additive nature, tolerances must be tighter than the overall requirement. Table 7. Alignment tolerancesSubassemblyTolerances (RMS)Total envelopeCryomodule assemblyCavity and helium vessel+/- 0.1 mmPositioning of the cavity with respect to external reference +/- 0.5 mmSupporting system+/- 0.2 mmVacuum vessel construction+/- 0.2 mmActionTransport, testing, and operationTransport and handling(+/- 0.5 g in any direction)+/- 0.2 mmReproducibility and stability of the cavity position with respect to external reference +/- 0.5 mmVacuum pumping+/- 0.3 mmCool-downRF testsWarm-upThermal cyclesCryomodule vacuum design and vacuum vesselVacuum vessel design is described in detail in "Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Vacuum Vessel" [ref 16]. A major new feature is access ports for the tuners, particularly with the goal in mind of access to the piezo tuners. A mock-up verifies the feasibility of access via the ports. The insulating vacuum is protected from over pressurization by means of a spring-loaded lift plate. A single worst case piping rupture internal to the insulating vacuum was analyzed to determine lift plate size. Provisions are provided to allow free passage of the helium out past thermal shield and MLI to the lift plate. Cryomodule thermal design and helium flow design Major thermal design features Table 8. Major thermal design featuresFeatureNotesRef #2 K temperature levelThe RF cavities are maintained at nominally 2 K by means of a stagnant bath of saturated liquid helium. 1.8 K to 2.1 K are possible temperatures, and the RF cavity helium vessel and piping design accommodate any temperature within this range. The design baseline is 2.0 Kelvin. 3, 5, 6 5 K temperature levelA helium circuit with pressures above the helium critical pressure (2.27 bar) so as to avoid 2-phase flow, and in the temperature range of 5 K to 8 K, provides a low temperature thermal intercept for the support posts, magnet current leads, RF power coupler, HOM absorbers, and instrumentation wires. Unlike XFEL, LCLS-II cryomodules have no thermal radiation shield at this temperature level. 3, 5, 645 K temperature levelThe highest temperature level will be helium in the range 35 K to 55 K. This temperature level provides not only conductive thermal intercepts but also a thermal radiation shield. There will be no liquid nitrogen in the LCLS-II tunnel. However, for test purposes in various test cryostats and facilities, the "45 K" thermal shield may be cooled with liquid nitrogen at approximately 80 K. This higher temperature within the test facilities will have some impact on thermal measurements relative to the 45 K tunnel condition, which will be assessed. 3, 5, 645 K thermal shieldThe thermal shield is designed such that introduction of cold (process temperature) helium into the thermal shield piping when the thermal shield is warm, resulting in a very fast cool-down, does not damage the thermal shield or other parts of the cryomodule. (The issues are warping and associated forces, thermal stresses, etc.) Thermal shield trace piping is arranged such that counterflow heat transfer does not inhibit cool-down of the thermal shield. 13, 14Cryomodule heat loadsHeat loads are summarized in “Cryomodule Heat Load” [ref 5], which also in turn lists the many sources of information for heat loads and thermal analyses. Special considerations for the high heat loads at 2 K with CW operation are described in section 8.2 of this document. 5MLIEvacuated multi-layer insulation (MLI) is used within the cryomodule on the thermal radiation shield, piping, and helium vessels. MLI on colder piping and vessels under the thermal radiation shield, while not very effective in terms of reducing overall heat load, greatly reduces boiloff rates from loss of vacuum incidents, in turn reducing emergency venting pipe and valve size requirements. 3 Electric heaters Each helium vessel includes an electric heater for 2 K flow and pressure control. In order to avoid cold feed-throughs from superfluid helium to insulating vacuum, these heaters are installed on the outsides of the helium vessels. The presence of a steady-state pressure drop results in a pressure change at the cryomodule with a change in flow rate (e.g. due to heat load change or liquid level control valve position change), even with constant cold compressor inlet pressure (perfect cryoplant pressure regulation). Heaters distributed within the cryomodules are required to compensate for heat load changes so as to control subsequent flow and pressure changes. 26TunerCables are thermally intercepted at the 45 K level. Special attention is given to thermal intercepting of the piezo actuator wires and housing so as to assure piezo temperatures remain below 80 K, to improve lifetime and performance. 3, 7RF power input couplerInput coupler thermal intercepts are provided at 5 K and at 45 K. Estimated input coupler heat loads (per coupler) are 0.09 W at 2 K, 0.41 W at 5 K, and 14.00 W at 45 K. 3, 11Cryogenic valvesValves appropriate for low temperature helium cryogenic service with thermal intercepts at the 45 K level and bellows stem seals are used. Valves are sized and have control characteristics based on the anticipated operating flow rates with allowance for worst-case conditions such as cool-down, warm-up, or recovery from some other upset condition. 23Design for large 2 K heat transport and helium flow Heat from the outside surface of the niobium RF cavity, and heat entering via conduction from the beam pipe at the RF cavity ends, is carried through stagnant saturated Helium II to the liquid helium surface in the 2-phase pipe via superfluid heat transport. For heat transport through saturated superfluid helium around 2.0 Kelvin, 1 Watt/sq.cm. is a conservative rule for a vertical pipe [refs 27, 28]. The critical heat flux for a non-vertical pipe connection from the helium vessel to the 2-phase pipe may be considerably less than 1 Watt/sq.cm. Configurations other than vertical require analysis to verify that the anticipated heat flux is less than the critical heat flux. Also, temperatures above 2.0 K result in a lower critical heat flux due to reduced superfluid heat transport. For LCLS-II, these considerations have resulted in our increasing the inner diameter of the nozzle (or “chimney”) from the helium vessel to the 2-phase pipe from 55 mm (the TESLA/XFEL size) to 95 mm. Figure 4. Maximum heat flux in saturated superfluid at 2.0 KelvinFigure 5. Heat transport path from input coupler and beam tube region to 2 K heliumEnd flange to cavity including support tabs must have sufficient helium cross-sectional area to carry heat from the cavity ends and beam tube into the bulk helium in the helium vessel (see Figure 5). Evaporation from the surface of the saturated helium liquid results in vapor flow within the 2-phase pipe over the liquid surface to an exit port connecting to the HGRP. Studies done at CEA Grenoble for CERN’s LHC magnet cooling [reference 29] provided the result that a 5 meters/sec vapor "speed limit" over liquid is a conservative “rule of thumb” not to entrain liquid droplets into the vapor. For LCLS-II, the closure of each 2-phase pipe in each cryomodule, limiting the 2-phase pipe vapor flow to that generated by one cryomodule, keeps the vapor flow rate quite low, less than 2 meters/sec. Nevertheless, the 0.5% slope (Figure 6) combined with the fact that the connecting nozzle from the helium vessel is 100 mm OD results in a 100 mm OD 2-phase pipe, larger than the 69 mm for XFEL. The result is that the pressure drop within the 2-phase pipe is negligibly small. (See Figure 7.) Figure 6. Liquid level illustration for single LCLS-II cryomoduleFigure 7. Pressure drop and vapor velocity in 2-phase pipePressure drop analysesPressure drops within and through the cryomodule are analyzed in combination with the helium distribution system. Pipe are sized for the worst case among steady-state, peak flow rates, upset, cool-down, warm-up, and venting and conditions. Pressure drops must be analyzed for each helium flow path to ensure that steady-state operation matches system design and that non-steady conditions (cool-down, emergency venting, warm-up) are properly handled. Input variables for these analyses include line size, allowable temperature rise, allowable pressure drop, and heat load. (Temperature rise and heat load determine mass flow for supercritical pressure helium or helium gas in the thermal intercept pipes and 2 K supply pipe.) For the HGRP, pressure drop is particularly important and limited, since this pressure drop determines the helium temperature at the helium vessel, hence RF cavity temperature. We design for a pressure drop < 10% of total pressure in normal operation. Maximum allowable pressure for emergency venting, combined with distances to relief devices may also influence line sizes. Helium piping and vessels vent into the adjacent cryomodules and out to the distribution system, allowing placement of all process relief valves in the distribution system. Loss of vacuum venting: pressure in the helium vessel of the dressed cavity less than the cold maximum allowable working pressure (MAWP) of the helium vessel and dressed cavity. Venting path includes nozzle from helium vessel, 2-phase pipe, may include gas return pipe, and also includes any external vent lines. Worst-case heat flux to liquid helium temperature metal surfaces with loss of vacuum to air is assumed to be 4.0 W/cm2. Worst-case heat flux to liquid helium temperature surfaces covered by at least 5 layers of multi-layer insulation (MLI) is assumed to be 0.6 W/cm2. Finally, we match cryomodule and cryogenic distribution system design to the cryogenic plant in terms of providing flow rates, temperatures, and pressures consistent with cryogenic plant requirements. Table 9. Cryomodule pipe size comparisonMaximum allowable working pressures (from Cryomodule FRS, LCLSII-2.5-FR-0053-R0) Table 10. Maximum allowable working pressuresRegionWarm MAWP (bar)Cold MAWP (bar)2 K, low pressure space2.04.02 K, positive pressure piping (separated by valves from low P space)20.020.05 K piping20.020.045 K piping20.020.0Insulating vacuum space1 atm external with full vacuum inside 0.5 positive differential internalCavity vacuum2.0 bar external with full vacuum inside 0.5 positive differential internal4.0 bar external with full vacuum inside 0.5 positive differential internalBeam pipe vacuum outside of cavities1 atm external with full vacuum inside 0.5 positive differential internal1 atm external with full vacuum inside 0.5 positive differential internalInstrumentation The cryomodule must be instrumented with liquid level probe (or probes) for the 2-phase helium II system, thermometry for cool-down and monitoring of critical input coupler, HOM coupler, and current lead temperatures, and other instrumentation as listed in "Fermilab Engineering Specification, LCLS-II Cryomodule Interfaces" (ED-0002307, reference 17). Cryomodule test requirements. The cryomodule will be tested before installation in the linac. Tests will check the following: Leak and pressure tests for quality assurance and FESHM compliance. Temperature profiles Approximate heat loads RF cavity performance Tuner performanceInstrumentation Pressure stability at the 2 K level It is possible to generate pressure pulses within a cryomodule, for example via heat input from the warm end of a closed pipe. Hence we have a requirement to avoid “dead-headed” lines which can warm up, for example, the line terminating at the closed cool-down valve after it is closed. To avoid a warm valve providing such a warm termination on the closed pipe, one recommended solution is to locate the valve lower than the supply pipe such that cold helium sits on the valve. This is implemented for the LCLS-II cryomodule valves. Cryomodule helium inventory Table 12. Cryomodule line sizes, helium conditions, and helium inventoryCryomodule total inventory is about 13,500 liquid liters equivalent of helium. What else? There are no doubt other design constraints and features to add to this document. I will add to this draft. ................
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