Paper | Title | Page |
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MOPPC040 | Study of Electronegative Gas Effect in Beam-Induced Plasma | 220 |
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Funding: This research was supported by US DOE under contract DE-AC02-07CH11359. Muon Colliders and Neutrino Factories call for R&D for a high-gradient RF system capable of operating in a high magnetic field. Adding a high pressure gas inside an RF cavity (HPRF) prevents cavity breakdown, allowing higher gradients in a magnetic field. A high-energy beam passing through an HPRF cavity ionizes the gas, producing plasma. Plasma electrons absorb cavity’s energy, reducing the energy available for beam acceleration. Doping cavity gas with electronegative gas (gas that tends to attract and bond electrons) reduces the number of plasma electrons. The experiments were carried out at the MuCool Test Area (MTA) facility at Fermilab. Different concentrations of an electronegative gas SF6 were added to hydrogen gas. The results of room-temperature tests showing a great reduction in power drop in the cavity will be presented. However, a realistic cavity would operate at liquid nitrogen temperature, where SF6 freezes. Thus, a search for a better electronegative gas candidate is underway; we plan to test oxygen-doping next. |
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MOPPC036 | Influence of Intense Beam in High Pressure Hydrogen Gas Filled RF Cavities | 208 |
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Funding: This work is supported by US DOE under contract DE-AC02-07CH11359. Breakdown plasma in a high-pressure hydrogen gas filled RF cavity has been studied from a time domain spectroscopic light analysis. The observed breakdown plasma temperature and density reached 21,000 K and 1020 cm-3, respectively. The electron recombination rate has been evaluated from the decay of plasma density in various gas pressures. The recombination mechanism in dense plasma will be discussed. Finally, the similarity and difference of the breakdown processes between the high-pressure hydrogen gas filled RF cavity and a vacuum RF one will be discussed. |
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MOPPC039 | Electron Recombination in a Dense Hydrogen Plasma | 217 |
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Funding: US DOE under contract DE-AC02-07CH11359. A high pressure hydrogen gas filled RF cavity was subjected to an intense proton beam to study the evolution of the beam induced plasma inside the cavity. The electron recombination rate with the dense ionized hydrogen plasma has been measured under varying conditions. Recombination rates as high as 10-7 cm3/s have been recorded. This technique shows promise in the R&D program for a muon accelerator. The use of hydrogen, both as a way to prevent breakdown in an RF cavity and as a mechanism for cooling a beam of muons, will be discussed. |
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TUPPD005 | Design Concept for Nu-STORM: an Initial “Very Low-Energy Neutrino Factory” | 1413 |
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Funding: US DOE under contract DE-AC02-07CH11359 We present a design concept for a Nu-source from a STORage ring for Muons - NuSTORM. In this initial design a high-intensity proton beam produces ~5 GeV pions that provide muons that are captured using “stochastic injection” within a ~3.6 GeV racetrack storage ring. In “stochastic injection”, the ~53 GeV pion beam is transported from the target into the storage ring, dispersion-matched into a long straight section. (Circulating and injection orbits are separated by momentum.) Decays within that straight section provide muons that are within the ~2 GeV/c ring momentum acceptance and are stored for the muon lifetime of ~1000 turns. Muon (and pion) decays in the long straight sections provide neutrino beams that can be used for precision measurements of neutrino interactions, and neutrino oscillations or disappearance at L/E=~1 m/MeV. The facility is described and variations are discussed. |
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WEOBA03 | Beam Tests of a High Pressure Gas-Filled Cavity for a Muon Collider | 2131 |
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Funding: US DOE under contract DE-AC02-07CH11359. One of the greatest challenges in constructing a Muon Collider is cooling the hot muons into a focused beam after their production. Because the beam must be cooled quickly before the muons decay, compact cooling designs require high gradient cavities inside strong magnetic fields. Unfortunately, due to focused field emission, an external magnetic field degrades the performance of the cavity below what is required for a muon collider. High-pressure gas inside the cavity has been proposed to both mitigate this effect, as well as serve as an absorber for transversely cooling the muon beam. A prototype of a high pressure gas-filled cavity is currently being studied at the Muon Test Area at Fermilab. The experimental setup as well as several measurements of the physics and performance of the apparatus while operating in a 400-MeV proton beam will be discussed. |
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Slides WEOBA03 [6.912 MB] | |
MOPPR070 | Beam Profile Measurement in MTA Beam Line for High Pressure RF Cavity Beam Test | 948 |
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Funding: This work is supported by the United States Department of Energy under contract DE-AC02-07CH11359. The recent High Pressure RF (HPRF) cavity experiment at the MuCool Test Area (MTA) used a 400 MeV Linac proton beam to study the beam loading effect. When the energetic proton beam passes through the cavity, it ionizes the inside gas and produces electrons. These electrons consume RF power inside the cavity. The number of electrons produced per cm inside the cavity (at 950 psi Hydrogen gas) per incident proton is 1200. The measurement of beam position and profile are necessary. The MTA is a flammable gas (Hydrogen) hazard zone, so we have developed a passive beam diagnostic instrument using a Chromox-6 scintillation screen and CCD camera. This paper presents quantitative information about beam position and beam profile. A neutral density filter was used to avoid saturation of the CCD camera. Image data is filtered and fitted with a Gaussian function to compute the beam size. The beam profile obtained from the scintillation screen will be compared with a multi-wire beam profile. |
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THPPC032 | Conditioning and Future Plans for a Multi-purpose 805 MHz Pillbox Cavity for Muon Acceleration | 3353 |
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Funding: Supported in part by grant 4735 · 10 LANL and Dept. of Energy STTR grant DE-FG02-08ER86352. An 805 MHz RF pillbox cavity has been designed and constructed to investigate potential muon beam acceleration and cooling techniques for a Muon Collider or Neutrino Factory. The cavity can operate in vacuum or under pressure to 100 atmospheres, at room temperature or in a liquid nitrogen bath at 77 K. The cavity has been designed for easy assembly and disassembly with bolted construction using aluminum seals. To perform vacuum and high pressure breakdown studies of materials and geometries most suitable for the collider or factory, the surfaces of the end walls of the cavity can be replaced with different materials such as copper, aluminum, beryllium, or molybdenum, and with different geometries such as shaped windows or grid structures. The cavity has been designed to fit inside the 5-Tesla solenoid in the MuCool Test Area at Fermilab. In this paper we present the vacuum conditioning results and discuss plans for testing in a 5-Tesla magnetic field. Additionally, we discuss the testing plan for beryllium (a material research has shown to be ideal for the collider or factory) end walls. |
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THPPC065 | Phase and Frequency Locked Magnetron | 3440 |
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Funding: Supported in part by SBIR Grant 4724 · 09SC02766 Phase and Frequency locked magnetrons have many important uses from phased array ground penetrating radars to SRF sources. We report on the recent progress in making such a magnetron. The ferrite/garnet material has passed bakeout and outgassing tests with outgassing rates well below the requirements. The magnetic field requirements for adjusting the frequency by changing the microwave properties of the ferrite/garnet have been determined. The design of the anode structure with ferrites, magnetic shielding, and magnetic bias has been completed for a low power test. We report on the design status. Muons, Inc. has negotiated an contract with a manufacturing firm, L-3 Electron Devices California Tube Laboratory, Inc., to be the Manufacturing Partner for the commercialization of this technology and support these Phase II efforts. |
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THPPD045 | High Temperature Superconducting Magnets for Efficient Low Energy Beam Transport Systems | 3614 |
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Modern ion accelerators and ion implantation systems need very short, highly versatile, Low Energy Beam Transport (LEBT) systems. The need for reliable and continuous operation requires LEBT designs to be simple and robust. The energy efficiency of available high temperature superconductors (HTS), with efficient and simple cryocooler refrigeration, is an additional attraction. Innovative, compact LEBT systems based on solenoids designed and built with high-temperature superconductor will be developed using computer models and prototyped. The parameters will be chosen to make this type of LEBT useful in a variety of ion accelerators, ion implantation systems, cancer therapy synchrotrons, and research accelerators, including the ORNL SNS. The benefits of solenoids made with HTS will be evaluated with analytical and numerical calculations for a two-solenoid configuration, as will be used in the SNS prototype LEBT that will replace the electrostatic one at SNS, and a single solenoid configuration, as was proposed for the Fermilab proton driver that will be most applicable to ion implantation applications. | ||