Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 1 Stave Core (“Plank”) Thermal QA - UK Motivation for Thermal QA: Building 24 modules to populate a plank costs a lot of effort and money (1 stave ≡ 40 transatlantic return flights*) => We should test the plank thoroughly (within reason). If it looks good and behaves well mechanically, it will probably be ok thermally. (?) But of course you can’t see inside it. Maybe you want to do some of: - Thermal QA of every plank (had better be fast: ~ 2h per plank?)….. the first few …. a selected sample - Check out thermally: irradiated / thermally cycled / otherwise stressed …planks Infrared Thermography (of the surface) is worth ~ 10 5 individual contact measurements. Is it feasible? (have had useful discussion with Dave L). * “only 3 if you travel First Class” (Adrian Bevan)
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Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 1
Stave Core (“Plank”) Thermal QA - UK
Motivation for Thermal QA:
Building 24 modules to populate a plank costs a lot of effort and money (1 stave ≡ 40 transatlantic return flights*) => We should test the plank thoroughly (within reason).
If it looks good and behaves well mechanically, it will probably be ok thermally. (?)
But of course you can’t see inside it.
Maybe you want to do some of:
- Thermal QA of every plank (had better be fast: ~ 2h per plank?)….. the first few …. a selected sample
e.g. +20C (ambient) => -25C (Tmean ≈ 270K) => 4.5 W/m2K - very comparable to convection!
Ambient load per module length of plank: ≈ 125 mm × 98mm × ~ 10 W/m2K × 45C => 5.5W ≈ Hybrid Power.
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 4
FEA Thermal Model of a section of plank• Quick & Dirty: Stave130 Module FEA with sensors+hybrids stripped away. Fast and
informative … not particularly accurate !
• Same htc top & bottom (clearly inaccurate)
• Cable Bus top and bottom
• 2mm id Ti pipe.
• Material Specific Heats assigned (used in transient case) - but Facing Glue Cv omitted.
- Corresponds rather roughly to Tim’s planklet measurement :
+20C, 10 W/m2K Surface Film Load
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 5
PERFECT PLANK in STEADY STATE: comparison with Tim’s IR plot.After a couple of iterations to tie down CO2 temperature (approx. -38.5C)
(FEA Ambient Thermal Load now ~ 6.5W).
ABAQUS FEA Tim’s IR (Stavelet3+masking tape) & Fit
-32°C
-25°C
-25°C
-40
-38
-36
-34
-32
-30
-28
-26
-24
-22
-20
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
Scale: Abaqus T looks ~ 14% low.
=> Some confidence in FEA feasibility studies …
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 6
Now introduce a FAULT into the FEA model: GLUE missing between the foam and pipe
Effect on STAVE (module) performance: Mean TC Headroom Sensor T (degrees)
Baseline, No faults -25.23 C 21.6
Missing from one pipe, top half, Z 10mm -25.21 21.5
" " " Z 30mm -25.14 21.3
" FULL circumference, 30mm -24.6 19.7
Choose as a benchmark test: glue missing over 30mm length, half the pipe circumference.
Has only a small effect on STAVE thermal performance (heat spreads around the fault)
Maybe you would want to know about it anyway. It might deteriorate with thermal cycling, etc.
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 7
PLANK FEA: GLUE FAULT (STEADY STATE)
Plotted bands: -32C=> -36C
0.2C intervals (~ camera resolution)
Height of bump is 0.7C (top surface - also 0.4C bump on bottom surface)
Would this be visible in practice?
- depends on “noise”: bus surface flatness, uniformity, convective fluctuations etc.
Fault: Steady State T vs Z through fault
-36
-35
-34
-33
-32
-31
-30
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Z [mm]
T [
C]
Fault: Steady State T vs X through fault
-36
-35
-34
-33
-32
-31
-30
-29
-28
-27
-26
-25
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120
X [mm]
T[C
]
fault centre
end of module
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 8
Tim, re Thermal Shock:
“What is the typical dT/dt seen during Stavelet Testing with CO2?”
Now look at Transient behaviour …
Stavelet 3: IR temperature history of two points on the surface, above the pipes, after turning on CO2 (later turning off / back on again)
At SP02 (above inlet pipe) T falls ~ 7C/s after turning on CO2…
CO2 flows around U-bend, and reaches SP01 after ~43s => speed ~ 12mm/s.
-meanwhile, outlet (SP01) is cooled, slowly, by conduction across the plank.
(Interesting? ~simultaneous warming when flow stopped).
Try to reproduce this in FEA - then assess potential for fault finding . . .
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 9
Transient FEA…
Sledgehammer approach:
- Divide pipe surface (crudely!) into 8 x 12.25mm lengths along Z
- Transient FEA 1s increments:
- Change film conditions for successive sections (≡ 12.25mm/s) from +20C, 10W/m2K => -38.5C, 8000W/m2K.
- Apply this to inlet pipe.
- After 43s, apply (in reverse sense) to outlet pipe
- Allow to settle (a further 43s).
(See Perfect Plank Transient.wmv: !Range is +20C to -40C)
Propagate change from Ambient to CO2 conditions in 1s steps
=> Plot history of surface T above centre of each pipe (as Tim)
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 10
PERFECT PLANK: Surface Temperature transient.
-40
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
-80 -20 40 100 160 220 280 340 400
Mid Inlet
Mid Outlet
-11
-10
-9
-8
-7
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
-80 -20 40 100 160 220 280 340 400
Mid Inlet
Mid Outlet
FEA doesn’t reproduce all features of IR, and peak dT/dt is 70% higher
But worth pursuing …
IR:
Rate [C/s] vs timeT vs time
FEA:
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 11
FEA TRANSIENT – with and without GLUE FAULT
PERFECT
Rate [C/s] vs time
FAULTY
(see Faulty Plank Transient.wmv
Range: 0C to -40C)
Peak Rate is unchanged on inlet side (~11C/s), but ~25% lower over centre of fault.
-40
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
0 30 60 90t [s]
T[C
]
Mid Inlet
Mid Outlet
Cooling starts at t ~ 1s
-40
-30
-20
-10
0
10
20
30
0 30 60 90t [s]
T[C
]
Mid Inlet
Mid Outlet
Cooling starts at t ~ 1s
T vs time
-11
-10
-9
-8
-7
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
-80 -20 40 100 160 220 280 340 400
Mid Inlet
Mid Outlet
-11
-10
-9
-8
-7
-6
-5
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
-80 -20 40 100 160 220 280 340 400
Mid Inlet
Mid Outlet
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 12
A Trivial QA Algorithm:
• Define lines L1,L2 on the surface above the pipes.
• Record T on L1, L2 for duration of test (this would
be ~ 5 mins for a full stave)
• For each Z, evaluate dT/dt(t).
• Plot Peak dT/dt vs Z.
• Look for anomalies (bumps)
The plots are derived in this way from the FEA
Temperatures at 2x20 nodes along the bus tape.[Fluctuations due to jerky FEA! Ignore Z extremes – wrong
BCs!]
=> Inlet behaviour is fairly level. . .
=> Outlet shows expected bump due to fault.
So there is an appreciable signal !! . . .BUT . . .
. . . there will be background conduction from ± Z
. . .and what is the noise like in practice???
Many Questions: Best answered by experiment!
Surface above OUTLET: Peak dT/dt vs Z (flow direction)
-12
-10
-8
-6
-4
-2
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Node Z coordinate [mm]
Pea
k d
T/d
t [C
/s]
Missing glue
no-fault level
Surface above INLET: Peak dT/dt vs Z (flow direction)
-16
-14
-12
-10
-8
-6
-4
-2
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
Node Z coordinate [mm]
Pea
k d
T/d
t [C
/s]
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 13
Vaporiser (Heater)
Alternative (avoiding thermal feedback)- FLOW routed through independent chiller bath- RETURN from stave routed directly to Vaporiser
Dial + DAQ. (Re-locate upstream of vaporiser)
T1 T2
T3
T4
T5
Tn located as per Nikhef Manual.T4 redundant if HEX omitted.T5 could be un-monitored/low precision.
T1,T2,T3: 4-wire PT100?(expensive but accurate).OR Pico 8-chan. Thermocouples (incs. Labview)
(Poss.re-locate second valve).
CYLINDER
STAVE
QMUL will build a CO2 blow-off cooling system to evaluate these QA ideas (so far have a list of parts to purchase – but need a decision on temperature monitoring)...and I believe Oxford are building an intentionally “faulty” stave.
Graham Beck, LBL September 2012 14
BACKUP: Measurement of IR Emissivity of Bus Tape
Bus sample + thermal grease on (warmed) block of copper. Black tape added (v. small correction to T, estimated by adding more layers). Spot radiometer measures T of tape and bus: Bus estimated assuming 94% for black tape. seems high – as hoped.Note: Kapton thickness is 25mm, cf radiometer sensitive in 8-13mm window.
At low temperature (-25C?) , Dave Lynn finds ~ 83%.
Emissivity inferred from Sample + Grease on Warm Copper Block