Shielding the turbomolecular pump and the vacuum gauge 11 June 2013 Kiril Marinov ASTeC, MaRS, DL 1
Dec 30, 2015
Design considerations
The external field is of the order of 40 mT. The pump can tolerate 5 mT, regardless of the field direction.
The proposed solution is a 15 mm thick AISI 1010 box, 600X170X170 mm. It “works” (kind of) but is quite heavy ~57 kg.
External field parallel to the long side of the shield is the worst case scenario, as shown earlier. This configuration required 15 mm thick walls for the larger shield
Reducing the shielded volume reduces the wall thickness. Halving the shield height has a big impact on performance.
Since the valve does not and will not need shielding in the future is it possible to make the pump shield smaller, thinner and lighter ~8 kg
I do not have exact drawings of the components that need to be shielded. Have some LD photos and sketches instead. As discussed with Craig dimensions will be finalized when/if the shields are engineered.
Concept
Bin
max<<<B0
Old
15 mm thick AISI 1010 steel600
300
Φ110
Φ 60
10 mm thick AISI 1010 steel
New
~57 kg~8 kg
170
Installation
The two halves can be held together by steel bands. The gap can be controlled by a thin gauge during assembly, should not be much bigger than 0.1 mm.
Not to scale
External field generation
External field generated by a window-frame magnet
Using the built-in option in opera
B B
External field generation method
When the external field is generated by an external magnet the execution is faster and takes fewer iterations.
When the built-in option in Opera is used one does not need to re-mesh the model after the field direction has been changed.
Field gradient can be added, if needed.
Not sure what boundary conditions are implemented for the external field, as in the general case it is neither normal nor tangential to the boundary.
Performance
B
B
The field inside the shielded area is below the 5 mT limit.
The external field is radial
The external field is axial.
220
The 220 mm “safe” area can be extended further by 3-4 cm by a adding a single chimney.
Performance II
“Hedgehog” plot of H
The external field is axial.
B
Ra
dia
l field is p
resen
tFie
ld inF
ield o
ut
Peak flux density in the wall
The vacuum gauge shield
200
Φ110
Φ 50
10 mm thick AISI 1010 steel
~6 kg
The same cylinder as used for the pump, only 200 mm long
150
50
Φ70
PerformanceThe field inside the shielded area is below 5 mT. The acceptable limit is 10 mT.
The external field is radial
The external field is axial.
The 140 mm “safe” area is more than sufficient as the gauge itself is ~100 mm long.
B
B
140
PerformanceWhen the external field is at 45o the result is very similar to that obtained with axial field. The safe zone extends by less than 1 cm.
The external field is at 45o
The external field is at 10o with respect to the X-axis.
When the external field is at 10o w.r.t. the X-axis the result is similar to the radial field case.
B
B
Summary
• Pump shield has been improved substantially. The target 5 mT field can now be reached safely regardless of the external field direction. The shield is now ~8 kg (not ~60 kg, as before). Wall thickness has been reduced from 15 mm to 10 mm.
• Shielding solution for the vacuum gauge has been found as well. The target field in the shielded area is easy to achieve.
• 75% of the work on the cryostat shielding (PSU, pump and vacuum gauge) is now complete. Need to look at magnetic forces, as promised. The “refrigerator” (cold head) shield still remains to be completed.
• I will take some time off the MICE shielding work in order to concentrate on preparations for MT23 in July.