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The China Jinping Underground Laboratory () is a deep underground laboratory in the
Jinping Mountains The Jinping Mountains or Jinping Shan () are a short north-south mountain range in southwestern Sichuan Province, China. The Jinping are located within Yanyuan and Mianning Counties, both in Liangshan Prefecture. This mountain range is notable ...
of
Sichuan Sichuan (; zh, c=, labels=no, ; zh, p=Sìchuān; alternatively romanized as Szechuan or Szechwan; formerly also referred to as "West China" or "Western China" by Protestant missions) is a province in Southwest China occupying most of the ...
, China. The
cosmic ray Cosmic rays are high-energy particles or clusters of particles (primarily represented by protons or atomic nuclei) that move through space at nearly the speed of light. They originate from the Sun, from outside of the Solar System in our own ...
rate in the laboratory is under 0.2 muons/m2/day, placing the lab at a depth of 6720  m.w.e. and making it the best-shielded underground laboratory in the world. The actual depth of the laboratory is , yet there is horizontal access so equipment may be brought in by truck. Although the
marble Marble is a metamorphic rock composed of recrystallized carbonate minerals, most commonly calcite or dolomite. Marble is typically not foliated (layered), although there are exceptions. In geology, the term ''marble'' refers to metamorphose ...
through which the tunnels are dug is considered " hard rock", at the great depth it presents greater geotechnical engineering challenges than the even harder
igneous rock Igneous rock (derived from the Latin word ''ignis'' meaning fire), or magmatic rock, is one of the three main rock types, the others being sedimentary and metamorphic. Igneous rock is formed through the cooling and solidification of magma o ...
s in which other deep laboratories are constructed. The water pressure in the rock is also inconvenient. But marble has the advantage for radiation shielding of being low in radionuclides, such as 40K, 226Ra, 232Th, and 238U. This in turn leads to low levels of
radon Radon is a chemical element with the symbol Rn and atomic number 86. It is a radioactive, colourless, odourless, tasteless noble gas. It occurs naturally in minute quantities as an intermediate step in the normal radioactive decay chains through ...
( 222Rn) in the atmosphere. The laboratory is in Liangshan in southern Sichuan, about southwest of
Chengdu Chengdu (, ; simplified Chinese: 成都; pinyin: ''Chéngdū''; Sichuanese pronunciation: , Standard Chinese pronunciation: ), alternatively romanized as Chengtu, is a sub-provincial city which serves as the capital of the Chinese pro ...
. The closest major airport is
Xichang Qingshan Airport Xichang Qingshan Airport () is an airport serving Xichang, the seat of Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan Province, China. The airport started an expansion project in February 2010. Airlines and destinations See also *List of ai ...
, away by road.


History

The
Jinping-II Dam The Jinping-II Dam (), also known as the Jinping-II Hydropower Station, is a gravity dam on the Jinping Bend of the Yalong River (Yalong Jiang) in Sichuan, China. Construction on the project began in 2007 and it was complete in 2014. Its hydroele ...
hydroelectric power project involved excavating a number of large tunnels under the
Jinping Mountains The Jinping Mountains or Jinping Shan () are a short north-south mountain range in southwestern Sichuan Province, China. The Jinping are located within Yanyuan and Mianning Counties, both in Liangshan Prefecture. This mountain range is notable ...
: four large headrace tunnels carrying water east, two vehicular access tunnels, and one water drainage tunnel. Hearing of the excavation in August 2008, physicists at
Tsinghua University Tsinghua University (; abbr. THU) is a national public research university in Beijing, China. The university is funded by the Ministry of Education. The university is a member of the C9 League, Double First Class University Plan, Projec ...
determined that it would be an excellent location for a deep underground laboratory, and negotiated with the hydropower company to excavate laboratory space in the middle of the tunnels. A formal agreement was signed on 8 May 2009, and excavation was promptly started. The first phase CJPL-I, consisting of a main hall, plus of access tunnel (4,000 m3 total excavation) was excavated by May 2010, and construction completed 12 June 2010. A formal laboratory inauguration was held 12 December 2010. The laboratory is to the south of the southernmost of the seven parallel tunnels, traffic tunnel A. The air ventilation in CJPL-I was initially inadequate, resulting in the accumulation of dust on the equipment and
radon gas Radon is a chemical element with the symbol Rn and atomic number 86. It is a radioactive, colourless, odourless, tasteless noble gas. It occurs naturally in minute quantities as an intermediate step in the normal radioactive decay chains through ...
in the air until additional ventilation was installed. A more difficult problem is that the walls of CJPL-I were lined with ordinary concrete taken from the hydroelectric project's supply. This has a natural radioactivity higher than desirable for a low-background laboratory. The second phase of construction uses materials selected for low radioactivity.


CJPL-II expansion

The laboratory is currently undergoing a major (50-fold) expansion. The first phase was rapidly filled, and plans for a second were made quickly, before the excavation workers and equipment departed following completion of the hydroelectric project in 2014. Slightly west of CJPL-I, two bypass tunnels totalling roughly long are left over from constructing the seven tunnels of the hydropower project. They are sloped criss-crossing tunnels which connect the midpoints of the five water tunnels (four headrace and one drainage) to the road tunnels beside and slightly above them. Totalling , and originally intended to be blocked off after construction, they have been donated to the laboratory and will be used for support facilities. The expansion has added : some interconnecting access tunnels, four large experimental halls, each , and two pits for shielding tanks below the halls' floors. The China Dark Matter Experiment has a cylindrical pit, deep and in diameter, which will be filled with a liquid nitrogen tank, and PandaX has an elliptical pit for a water shielding tank, and deep. The halls were complete by the end of 2015,, the pits by May 2016, and are being fitted with ventilation systems and other necessities. (This is somewhat behind expectations that they would be ready for occupation in January 2017.) When complete, it will be the world's largest underground laboratory, surpassing the current record-holder the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (LNGS). Although greater depth and weaker rock force the halls to be narrower than the wide main halls of LNGS, their combined length of provides more floor space ( vs. ) than LNGS's three halls totalling . CJPL's halls also enclose more volume than those of LNGS. CJPL has in the halls proper, and an additional in the shielding pits making a total of , slightly more than LNGS's . Including the service areas outside the main halls, the result is of usable space, more than LNGS's grand total of . CJPL's total volume of would suggest that CJPL is twice the size, but that would be misleading; all of LNGS's excavation was designed to be a laboratory, and thus can be used more efficiently than CJPL's repurposed tunnels. Thanks to the laboratory's location within a major hydroelectric facility, additional electrical power is readily available. CJPL-II is supplied by two redundant 10 kV, power cables; available power is temporarily limited by the 5×250 kVA step-down transformers in the laboratory (one per experiment hall, and a fifth for facilities). There is likewise no shortage of water for cooling high-powered equipment. The muon flux in (and thus water equivalent depth of) CJPL-II is currently being measured, and may differ slightly from CJPL-I, but it will certainly remain lower than
SNOLAB SNOLAB is a Canadian underground science laboratory specializing in neutrino and dark matter physics. Located 2 km below the surface in Vale's Creighton nickel mine near Sudbury, Ontario, SNOLAB is an expansion of the existing facilities con ...
in
Canada Canada is a country in North America. Its ten provinces and three territories extend from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean and northward into the Arctic Ocean, covering over , making it the world's second-largest country by tot ...
and thus retain the record for the world's deepest laboratory as well.


Experiments

Experiments currently operating in CJPL are: * China Dark Matter Experiment (CDEX), a germanium
dark matter Dark matter is a hypothetical form of matter thought to account for approximately 85% of the matter in the universe. Dark matter is called "dark" because it does not appear to interact with the electromagnetic field, which means it does not a ...
detector, * PandaX, the Particle and Astrophysical Xenon Detector for dark matter (and
neutrinoless double beta decay The neutrinoless double beta decay (0νββ) is a commonly proposed and experimentally pursued theoretical radioactive decay process that would prove a Majorana nature of the neutrino particle. To this day, it has not been found. The discovery o ...
), and * A 1-ton prototype of the planned 100-ton Jinping Neutrino Experiment, an experiment taking advantage of CJPL's location far from nuclear reactors, and thus having the lowest flux of reactor neutrinos of any underground laboratory, to do precision measurements of solar- and
geoneutrino A geoneutrino is a neutrino or antineutrino emitted in decay of radionuclide naturally occurring in the Earth. Neutrinos, the lightest of the known subatomic particles, lack measurable electromagnetic properties and interact only via the weak nucl ...
s. Also operating in the laboratory is a low background facility using a high purity germanium detector, for measuring very low levels of radioactivity. This is not a physics experiment itself, but tests materials intended for use in the experiments. It also tests materials used to construct CJPL-II. Experiments currently planned for CJPL-II are: * a larger, tonne-scale version of CDEX, * a larger, tonne-scale version of PandaX, * Jinping Underground Nuclear Astrophysics (JUNA), an experiment to measure the rates of astrophysically important stellar nuclear reactions, and * a possible liquid argon dark matter detector. Proposals also exist for: * CUPID (CUORE Upgrade with Particle Identification), a neutrinoless double beta decay experiment, and * a directional dark matter detector by the MIMAC (MIcro-tpc MAtrix of Chambers) collaboration, as a follow-on to their detector currently operating at the Modane Underground Laboratory.


Notes


References


External links


CJPL home page
(Tsinghua University)
Jinping Neutrino Experiment home page
(Tsinghua University)
CJPL GitHub page

Symposium on Future Applications of Germanium Detectors in Fundamental Research
in Beijing, with multiple CJPL presentations
A Town Meeting for the 2nd-phase Development of the China Jinping Underground Laboratory
(Sept. 8, 2013) at the 13th International Conference on Topics in Astroparticle and Underground Physics

{{Underground laboratories Underground laboratories Laboratories in China Buildings and structures in Sichuan