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Radiation damage of a two-dimensional carbon fiber composite (CFC)

  • N. Simos
  • , E. Quaranta
  • , N. Charitonidis
  • , D. Sprouster
  • , Z. Zhong
  • , S. Ghose
  • , Z. Kotsina
  • , R. Assmann
  • , S. Redaelli
  • , A. Bertarelli
  • , A. I. Ryazanov
  • Brookhaven Ng
  • CERN
  • Stony Brook University
  • Demokritos National Centre for Scientific Research
  • German Electron Synchrotron
  • Russian Research Centre Kurchatov Institute

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Carbon fiber composites (CFC) are, among other applications, already in use as low-impedance collimating elements for intercepting TeV-level protons machines, like the CERN Large Hadron Collider. Towards a comprehensive understanding of these materials’ properties and behavior, a series of radiation damage campaigns have been undertaken in order to quantitively investigate the response of AC-150 K CFC to high proton fluences. The CFCs dimensional changes, stability, micro-structural evolution, and structural integrity below and above 5 × 1020 p/cm2 fluence threshold were studied. The irradiating particles were protons of kinetic energies in the range of 130–200 MeV. The effects of the irradiation temperature (~90–180 °C and 280–500 °C) combined with the proton fluence on the dimensional stability and the microstructural evolution of this anisotropic two-dimensional composite structure were studied using precision dilatometry and X-ray diffraction. Our results shed light on the fluence-based limitations for these composite materials. Furthermore, we compare these results with reference unirradiated graphite, and we discuss the similarities and differences in the dimensional changes and post-irradiation annealing properties.

Original languageEnglish
JournalCarbon Trends
Volume3
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2021

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