Thursday, October 18, 2012

1210.4835 (R. Bates et al.)

A combined ultrasonic flow meter and binary vapour mixture analyzer for
the ATLAS silicon tracker
   [PDF]

R. Bates, M. Battistin, S. Berry, J. Berthoud, A. Bitadze, P. Bonneau, J. Botelho-Direito, N. Bousson, G. Boyd, G. Bozza, E. Da Riva, C. Degeorge, B. DiGirolamo, M. Doubek, D. Giugni, J. Godlewski, G. Hallewell, S. Katunin, D. Lombard, M. Mathieu, S. McMahon, K. Nagai, E. Perez-Rodriguez, C. Rossi, A. Rozanov, V. Vacek, M. Vitek, L. Zwalinski
An upgrade to the ATLAS silicon tracker cooling control system may require a change from C3F8 (octafluoro-propane) evaporative coolant to a blend containing 10-25% of C2F6 (hexafluoro-ethane). Such a change will reduce the evaporation temperature to assure thermal stability following radiation damage accumulated at full LHC luminosity. Central to this upgrade is a new ultrasonic instrument in which sound transit times are continuously measured in opposite directions in flowing gas at known temperature and pressure to deduce the C3F8/C2F6 flow rate and mixture composition. The instrument and its Supervisory, Control and Data Acquisition (SCADA) software are described in this paper. Several geometries for the instrument are in use or under evaluation. An instrument with a pinched axial geometry intended for analysis and measurement of moderate flow rates has demonstrated a mixture resolution of 3.10-3 for C3F8/C2F6 molar mixtures with 20%C2F6, and a flow resolution of 2% of full scale for mass flows up to 30gs-1. In mixtures of widely-differing molecular weight (mw), higher mixture precision is possible: a sensitivity of <5.10-5 to leaks of C3F8 into part of the ATLAS tracker nitrogen envelope (mw difference 160) has been seen. An instrument with an angled sound path geometry has been developed for use at high fluorocarbon mass flow rates of around 1.2 kgs-1 - corresponding to full flow in a new 60kW thermosiphon recirculator under construction for the ATLAS silicon tracker. Extensive computational fluid dynamics studies were performed to determine the preferred geometry (ultrasonic transducer spacing and placement, together with the sound crossing angle with respect to the vapour flow direction). A prototype with 45deg crossing angle has demonstrated a flow resolution of 1.9% of full scale for linear flow velocities up to 15 ms-1. The instrument has many potential applications.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1210.4835

No comments:

Post a Comment