这是一个关键问题的时候to delivering fuel to space launchers at their launch pads, or operating the superconducting magnets and cavities of particle accelerators, or mastering nuclear fusion. It sparked years of intensive research that resulted in the development by Air Liquide of cryogenic distribution lines, super-insulated and under vacuum, offering high energy performance.
Air Liquide supplied the cryogenic lines for these two key projects:
The LHC at CERN: discovering the origin of matter
The objective of the LHC particle accelerator at CERN is to reproduce the conditions that followed the original big bang. Giant collisions between protons are thus created using intense magnetic fields generated by superconducting magnets. Air Liquide achieved a world first by designing a cryogenic line that distributes the 100 tons of superfluid helium at 1.9 Kelvin required to operate the 17,000 LHC magnets. On the same route as the accelerator, the line consists of a 27 km ring divided into eight sectors, each of them connected to an 18 kW refrigerator and a cold compression system via distribution boxes, also developed by Air Liquide.
27km of multi-tube cryogenic lines buried100m underground
Magnetic fields100 000more intense than the earth’s magnetic field
Thermal inputs of less than0.07W per meter
The ITER experimental reactor: mastering thermo-nuclear fusion
Controlled fusion is one of the most promising lines of carbon-free energy production. The ITER project aims to control this safe and inexhaustible energy. Electromagnets control the confinement of the fusion plasma in the reactor. As in the case of the LHC, the cryogenic lines carry cold to the magnets. They circulate the cold liquid helium from the cryogenic production plant to the reactor and then return heated helium to the factory. The ITER lines are 10 times shorter than those of the LHC but are more technically sophisticated: there are 19 types of vacuum cryogenic lines at different supply temperatures under pressures of up to 20 bars.
1.6km of cryogenic lines
4.5to80K: the temperatures of cryogenic fluids distributed
19different cryogenic lines
Chronological milestones
1986 – Commissioning of 650 m of hydrogen transfer line in Kourou for the Ariane launcher
1988 – Start-up of the distribution lines of the tokamak Tore Supra in Cadarache
1992 – Commissioning of the ELA3 launch pad in Kourou
1995 – Preliminary study on the LHC QRL line
2001 – 100 m prototype of the QRL line
2002 – LHC contract won in Geneva
2008 – Start-up of the cryogenic plant and the helium distribution of the South Korean pilot civil nuclear fusion reactor, KSTAR
2014 – Acceptance of the LHC cryogenic lines at the CERN