Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

13
E163: Laser Acceleration at the NLCTA Goal: Demonstrate the technical feasibility of laser- driven particle acceleration Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom). Stanford University Bob Byer (co-PI), Tomas Plettner SLAC Eric Colby(spokesman), Bob Noble (Project Manager), Bob Siemann (co-PI), Jim Spencer, Dieter Walz (UTR & Project Engineer) Ben Cowan, Mehdi Javanmard, Chris Sears (students) Fire Protection Plans, February 3, 2003

description

E163: Laser Acceleration at the NLCTA Goal: Demonstrate the technical feasibility of laser-driven particle acceleration. Stanford University Bob Byer (co-PI), Tomas Plettner SLAC - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

Page 1: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

E163: Laser Acceleration at the NLCTAGoal: Demonstrate the technical feasibility of laser-driven particle acceleration

Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

Stanford University

Bob Byer (co-PI), Tomas Plettner

SLAC

Eric Colby(spokesman), Bob Noble (Project Manager), Bob Siemann (co-PI), Jim Spencer, Dieter Walz (UTR & Project Engineer)

Ben Cowan, Mehdi Javanmard, Chris Sears (students)

Fire Protection Plans, February 3, 2003

Page 2: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

E163 Layout

RF System

LASER ROOM

SHIELDED ENCLOSURE

NLCTA

N

E163 Counting Room(b. 225)

225 Moved hereSummer 2003

 

 

  

May 2003

Oct

2003

ORION Extension

2005

Oct 2003

Add/change equipment inside NLCTA enclosure: March 2004

Overhead Cable Tray

61 2

3

5

4

7

Page 3: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

E163 Plan

April 2003: Core drill penetrations

May 2003: Start assembly of shielded enclosure

Summer 2003: Relocate building 225 to NE corner of ESB

October 2003: Start construction of laser room, rf system

March 2004: Installation of beamline components, commissioning

2005: Start construction of ORION low energy hall

2006: Knock out ceiling, North, and East walls of E163 enclosure and join to ORION low energy hall

Page 4: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

Concrete Shielding Enclosure Fire Detection and Alarm System (“Area 2”)

Combustible Content: ~200# cabling in traysOccupancy: 0.5-1.0 FTE per yearMCFL: ~200k$MPFL:~50k$Total value of equipment: ~$500k

Structure lifespan: 3 yearsStart Construction: May 2003

Page 5: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

Laser Room Fire Detection and Alarm System (“Area 1”)Combustible Content: ~50# cabling, ~100# books, ~1 liter solvents, 1 rack of electronic equipment

Occupancy: 0.5-1.0 FTE per year

MCFL: ~400k$

MPFL:~50k$

Total value of equipment: ~$500k

Structure lifespan: >10 yearsStart Construction: Oct 2003

Page 6: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

E163 Concrete Enclosure Roof Fire Detection and Alarm System (“Area 3”)

Combustible Content: ~200# cabling, 3-4 racks of electronic equipment

Occupancy: few days per year total

MCFL: ~100k$

MPFL:~25k$

Total value of equipment: ~$100k

Structure lifespan: >10 yearsStart Construction: Oct 2003

Page 7: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

NLCTA-Area Fire Detection and Alarm System (“Area 4”)Combustible Content: ~200# cabling

Added Occupancy: 0.1 FTE per year

MCFL: ~500k$

MPFL:~100k$

Total value of equipment: ~$500k

Equipment lifespan: >10 yearsStart Construction: Mar 2004

Page 8: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

RF Power System Area Fire Detection and Alarm System (“Area 5”)Combustible Content: ~100# cabling, ~100# oil, 2-3 racks electronic equipment

Occupancy: 0.1 FTE per year

MCFL: ~400k$

MPFL:~50k$

Total value of equipment: ~$750k

Equipment lifespan: >10 yearsStart Construction: Oct 2003

8-pack HVPS

Extend existing HSSD sampling tubeKlystron & modulator

Power to modulator, HVPS, other large supplies disconnected on fire alarm by contactors controlled by FACP

NLCTAS

Page 9: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

NLCTA Rack-Area Fire Detection and Alarm System (“Area 6”)Combustible Content: ~100# cabling

Added Occupancy: few days per year

MCFL: ~100k$

MPFL:~25k$

Total value of equipment: ~$100k

Equipment lifespan: >10 yearsStart Construction: Oct 2003

Additional Rack

Of Equipment

SW corner of ESB

Page 10: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

NLCTA Rack-Area Fire Detection and Alarm System (“Area 6”)Combustible Content: ~100# cabling

Added Occupancy: few days per year

MCFL: ~100k$

MPFL:~25k$

Total value of equipment: ~$100k

Equipment lifespan: >10 yearsStart Construction: Oct 2003

Additional Rack

Of Equipment

SW corner of ESB

Page 11: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).

E163 Counting Room (b. 225 Relocated) (“Area 7”)Combustible Content: ~200# cabling

Added Occupancy: 1.0-1.5 FTE

MCFL: ~500k$

MPFL:~50k$

Total value of equipment: ~$500k

Equipment lifespan: >10 yearsStart Relocation: Summer 2003

B. 225 has sprinklers, which will be reconnected

225

Page 12: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).
Page 13: Photonic band gap structures made by lithography (top) and fiber-drawing (bottom).