90 likes | 233 Views
Cooling connections in the service gap. Richard French The University of Sheffield. Overview. Main topics covered today. Tangential thoughts………. Does the TDR lock us into a specific service gap size Access will dictate tube wall size eg poor access = thicker wall tube
E N D
Cooling connections in the service gap Richard French The University of Sheffield
Overview Main topics covered today Tangential thoughts……….. Does the TDR lock us into a specific service gap size Access will dictate tube wall size eg poor access = thicker wall tube Purge gas – how to get it to the joint that we are welding with overpressure All applies to rework except Tube end preparation for welding Cutting out old BACK TO ACCESS REQUIREMENTS • Services Gap Dimensions • Access requirements for Welding • Re-work
Joining and weldability • 316 • CP2 • TIG orbital welding limit is 125μm • Have not tried to reduce further • Butt welding successful on both 2.275mm and 1/8” tube • Diameters are 2.275mm and 1/8” so standard fittings work on the 1/8” tube but are hopeless for the smaller OD. • 125μm wall in small OD is not for in-situ joining or ……….. • We need to make the tube preparation very good but I don’t see this happening yet. • TIG orbital welding limit is 200μm • Have not tried to reduce further • Butt welding successful on both 2mm and 1/8” tube • Diameters are 2.0mm and 1/8” so standard fittings work without modification • Brazing is ok but untested as not needed to make this joint as never dissimilar material • Can join this material without much effort or thinking. • Its pretty easy once you know how • We have made thousands of tube welded joints in a range of materials both commercially, commercial research and have pushed R&D for TIG beyond commercial requirements to date. • We evaluate welding machinery for companies using our techniques and equipment designed in-house.
Service Gap Dimension (z=91mm) Robert Gabrielczyk - RAL
Detail • We should not get hung up on the gap dimensions in Z (photo) • We should worry about the position of the tube in relation to the end of stave eg – push the tube further out to the EC’s to increase clearance • NOT WORRIED YET for installation • WORRIED IF WE NEED TO REWORK in the sense of a service intervention post installation
Access requirements for welding • 5.5m cable length from power supply to weld head • WPS qualified for this length • Not worried about RF from machine – maybe add a shielded cable – weld head ok. • G – Add another 80mm as we need to move the cassette in and out the head • C – Add another 10m as we need to add support collets for in-situ work to suit tube type better (tube joint alignment and heat sinking) • Need to be realistic and work out what tubes can go where when held by hand. • Can we use jigs – doubt it. • IM tasked with a measuring system = simple point to point feeler – check if ok for 3D. • If in doubt we use filler rings to support the tubes. Not tested at all yet as will be very bespoke
Re-work of connections • Things to consider • I am not considering re-work of 125um CP2 Ti in-situ • Here I consider 200um CP2 Ti rework in either 2.5mm OD or 1/8” OD • We can not weld on a weld – we can but it is very bad practice (annealing) • Cut sections out and replace • Electrical break – capacitance induction or transient voltage • Gas purge must be present during re-work. • Can we add valves to the system to prevent filling the entire volume? • Tube ends must be flat and parrallel with excellent surface finish and all oxide removed, no burrs, no swarf or dust in the bore – • Debris filtering can be used