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FCC Refrigeration cost vs magnet temperature Laurent Tavian CERN, ATS-DO 15 February 2016.

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Presentation on theme: "FCC Refrigeration cost vs magnet temperature Laurent Tavian CERN, ATS-DO 15 February 2016."— Presentation transcript:

1 FCC Refrigeration cost vs magnet temperature Laurent Tavian CERN, ATS-DO 15 February 2016

2 Contents Refrigeration need for magnet cooling vs – shaft elevation and cryoplant location – Operating magnet temperature Optimum cutting temperature between ground and underground refrigeration – Cryogenic architecture proposal CAPEX and OPEX for magnet cooling vs operating magnet temperature CAPEX and OPEX for FCC cooling

3 FCC-hh cryogenic layout 10 cryoplants 6 technical sites Sector length ~8 km

4 Cooling scheme He II cooling He I cooling

5 Exergy load Carnot eff: 0.29

6 Exergy efficiency T0= 290 K, h= 0 m

7 Cryoplant size Depending on the cryoplant location (surface or underground), the entropic size increase from 20 to 25 %  the cryoplant must be partially located underground.

8 Contents Refrigeration need for magnet cooling vs – shaft elevation and cryoplant location – Operating magnet temperature Optimum cutting temperature between ground and underground refrigeration – Cryogenic architecture proposal CAPEX and OPEX for magnet cooling vs operating magnet temperature CAPEX and OPEX for FCC cooling

9 Cutting temperature Shaft elevation impacts the hydrostatic head ( .g.h) and the enthalpy (g.h) variations: The relative variation strongly depends on the operating temperature. 40 K is a good compromise compatible with the Nelium cycle producing the refrigeration capacity down to 40 K and which has to be located at the surface for limiting the Neon inventory (cost). h= 400 m

10 Cryoplant architecture

11 Process flow diagram

12 Contents Refrigeration need for magnet cooling vs – shaft elevation and cryoplant location – Operating magnet temperature Optimum cutting temperature between ground and underground refrigeration – Cryogenic architecture proposal CAPEX and OPEX for magnet cooling vs operating magnet temperature CAPEX and OPEX for FCC cooling

13 4.5 K cryoplant cost Tmag = 4.5 K Tmag = 1.9 K Extra cost (4.5  1.9 K): 10 to 18 MCHF per sector  100 to 180 MCHF for FCC

14 Cold compression cost Extra cost (4.5  1.9 K): 7 MCHF per sector  70 MCHF for FCC

15 Operation cost (for magnet cooling) T magnet 4.5 K1.9 K Power to refrigerator [W/m] 5251220 Power to refrigerator [MW/sector] 4.29.8 FCC energy consumption over 10 y, 6000 h/y [TW.h] 2.55.9 FCC energy cost over 10 y [MCHF] 150350 Extra cost (4.5  1.9 K): 20 MCHF per sector  200 MCHF for FCC

16 Extra cryo-cost 1.9 K vs 4.5 K CAPEX: – Cryoplant extra cost: 100 to 180 MCHF – Cold compression extra cost:70 MCHF – Total CAPEX extra cost:170 to 250 MCHF OPEX – Operation extra cost (10 y)200 MCHF Total extra cost 370 to 450 MCHF (CAPEX + OPEX(10 y))

17 Contents Refrigeration need for magnet cooling vs – shaft elevation and cryoplant location – Operating magnet temperature Optimum cutting temperature between ground and underground refrigeration – Cryogenic architecture proposal CAPEX and OPEX for magnet cooling vs operating magnet temperature CAPEX and OPEX for FCC cooling

18 Nelium cycle and BS circulators

19 CL cooling m1  85 g/s (50 g/s per MA)  exergy load: 154 kW per sector m2  9 g/s  exergy load: 61 kW Total exergy load: 215 kW  equi. 3.4 kW @ 4.5 K Total power to refrigerator: 746 kW per sector

20 FCC Refrigerator cost [MCHF] OPEX [MCHF] (10 y @ 6000 h/y] T mag 4.5 KT mag 1.9 K MW/sectorOPEXMW/sectorOPEX BS-TS cooling9-10320-3609-10320-360 Magnet cooling4.21509.8350 CL cooling0.75270.7527 Total14-15490-53020-21700-740 CAPEX [MCHF]T mag 4.5 KT mag 1.9 K BS-TS coolingX ? Magnet cooling180350-430 CL cooling1410-14 Total194 + X360-444 (+X) Without overcapacity margin

21 Comparison with Linde publication CAPEX C 4.5K (12 kW) =12 MCHF (see slide 12) C 1.9K (12 kW) =35-43 MCHF (see slide 19) C 1.9K (12 kW)/C 4.5K (12 kW)=2.9-3.6 L. Decker In good agreement !

22 Comparison with Linde publication OPEX C 4.5K (12 kW) = 9.5 MCHF (220 W/W) C 1.9K (12 kW) = 35 MCHF (see slide 19) C 1.9K (12 kW)/C 4.5K (12 kW)= 3.7 L. Decker Factor ~2 difference !

23 Comparison with Linde publication OPEX C 4.5K (12 kW) = 9.5 MCHF (220 W/W  2.6 MW) if C 1.9K (12 kW)/C 4.5K (12 kW)= 7.5 i.e. C 1.9K (12 kW)  19.5 MW of electrical consumption i.e. a COP 1.9K = 1620 W/W i.e. a Carnot efficiency of about 10 % (very small!) L. Decker

24 Other impacts 1.9 K vs 4.5 K Coldmass diameter: – impact on cooldown time and LN2 consumption (OPEX for 4.5 K). – Impact on tunnel integration and or tunnel diameter (CAPEX for 4.5 K) – Helium inventory (OPEX for 4.5 K) Pumping line: Higher diameter i.e. tunnel integration and or tunnel diameter (CAPEX for 1.9 K) Size of cryoplants: increase of building surface and cavern volume (CAPEX for 1.9 K).


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