Air Liquide innovation and technology at the service of CERN for the LHC
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The largest and most complex scientific instrument ever built will be officially inaugurated at CERN, European Centre for Nuclear Research, on October 21, 2008 by government representatives from the CERN member states, and many other dignitaries. On September 10th, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) was successfully started, emitted its first beam of protons and is currently stopped until next Spring.
The LHC, the world’s most powerful particle accelerator, will break new ground in terms of knowledge of particle physics and will therefore advance fundamental physics research into matter and the birth of the universe.
Since 1995, Air Liquide has contributed to this exceptional project, developing the "largest refrigerator in the world": a complex and innovative system of liquid helium distribution and cooling.
Placed in a tunnel 100 meters below ground, on the French-Swiss border, the cryogenic system designed and installed by Air Liquide distributes superfluid liquid helium in a ring measuring 27 km in circumference. The LHC's 1,700 superconducting magnets must be maintained at a temperature of 1.8K (-271°C), a cryogenic temperature very close to "absolute zero*". Air Liquide also developed and supplied CERN with the liquefiers required to cool the helium. The Group's operation and maintenance teams provide CERN with their know-how and skill on a daily basis, in the fields of cryogenics.
François Darchis, member of the Air Liquide Executive Committee, in charge of Advanced Technologies, declared: “The exceptional dimension of the LHC and the expected level of performance presented Air Liquide teams with a technological challenge that was met successfully. We are delighted with the first beam generations and continue to support CERN in order to open up the field of knowledge in fundamental physics. Air Liquide is proud to be contributing in this way to scientific projects that require total mastery of cryogenics at ultra low temperature.”
* Absolute zero: the lowest temperature we can approach, corresponding to 0K on the Kelvin temperature scale or -273.15°C on the Celsius temperature scale. 0 Kelvin is the temperature at which the movements of atoms and particles should be “fixed” and at which heat would no longer be produced by the atoms.
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