Thermally-driven scintillator flow in the SNO plus neutrino detector

被引:0
|
作者
Wilson, J. D. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alberta, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, Edmonton, AB, Canada
[2] Univ Alberta, Dept Earth & Atmospher Sci, 1-26 Earth Sci Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
Neutrino detector; Spherical fluid cavity; Internal convection; Fluid scintillator motion; Internal gravity wave; STATE NATURAL-CONVECTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.nima.2023.168430
中图分类号
TH7 [仪器、仪表];
学科分类号
0804 ; 080401 ; 081102 ;
摘要
The SNO+ neutrino detector is an acrylic sphere (radius 6 m) with a thin vertical neck containing almost 800 tonnes of liquid scintillator. The apparatus is immersed in a water-filled underground cavern, the neck protruding upward into a manifold above water level, with scintillator filling the sphere and rising up the neck some 6 m to an interface with purified nitrogen gas. Time-dependent flow simulations have been performed to investigate convective motion of the scintillator fluid, motivated by observations of a transient radon (222Rn) contamination layer which, over a period of two weeks, sank from near the base of the neck to the detector's equator. According to simulations, this motion may have been induced by heat transfer through the detector wall, that resulted in buoyant ascending flow within a thin wall boundary layer and compensating sink elsewhere. This mechanism can result in transport down the neck to the sphere on a time scale of several hours. If the scintillator happens to be thermally stratified, the same forcing by a weak wall heat flux produces internal gravity waves in the spherical flow domain, at the Brunt-Vaisala frequency. Nevertheless as oscillatory motion is by its nature non-diffusive, simulations confirm that imposing strong thermal stratification over the depth of the neck can mitigate mixing due to transient heat fluxes.
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页数:16
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