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Mustapha, B.

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MOP091 End-to-End Simulation of the SNS Linac Using TRACK 290
 
  • B. Mustapha, P.N. Ostroumov
    ANL, Argonne
  • D. Jeon
    ORNL, Oak Ridge, Tennessee
 
 

Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Contract No. DE-AC-02-06CH11357.
In an effort to simulate the SNS linac using the beam dynamics code TRACK and to benchmark the results against the recent commissioning data, we have started updating TRACK to support SNS-type elements such as DTL's and CCL's. After successfully implementing and simulating the DTL section of the SNS linac*, we have implemented the CCL section and the high energy superconducting (SC) section up to 1 GeV. Results from end-to-end simulations of the SNS linac using TRACK will be presented and compared to simulations using other codes and to the recent commissioning data.


*"First TRACK Simulations of the SNS linac", B. Mustapha et al., in Proceedings of Linac-06 Conference, Knoxville, Tennessee, August 21-25, 2006.

 
TUP085 Four-Dimensional Emittance Meter for DC Ion Beams Extracted from an ECR Ion Source 597
 
  • S.A. Kondrashev, A. Barcikowski, B. Mustapha, P.N. Ostroumov
    ANL, Argonne
  • N. Vinogradov
    Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois
 
 

Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics, under contract number DE-AC02-06CH11357.
We have developed a pepper pot - scintillator screen system to measure the emittance of low-energy dc beams extracted from an ECR ion source and post-accelerated to an energy of 75 - 90 keV/charge. Different scintillators have been tested and CsI (Tl) was chosen due to its high sensitivity, wide dynamic range and long life-time. The linearity of both the scintillator and the CCD camera has been studied. A LabVIEW code has been developed and used for on-line emittance measurements. Un-normalized rms emittances measured for 209Bi20+ and 209Bi21+ beams with current of 1.0 - 1.5 pnA are usually ~30 π mm.mrad. A complicated structure of multiple images of individual holes has been observed. The innovative combination of a special type of scintillator, a CCD camera and a fast shutter allowed us to create a very efficient emittance meter for low-energy dc ion beams. Using on-line emittance measurements, it was possible to improve the beam quality by re-tuning the ion source conditions. Because of the two-dimensional array of holes in the pepper-pot, this emittance meter can be used to observe and study four-dimensional emittance correlations in beams from ECR ion sources.

 
TUP118 Extraction From ECR and Recombination of Multiple-Charge State Heavy-Ion Beams in LEBT 679
 
  • P.N. Ostroumov, A. Barcikowski, S.A. Kondrashev, B. Mustapha, R.H. Scott, S.I. Sharamentov
    ANL, Argonne
  • N. Vinogradov
    Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois
 
 

Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Contract No. DE-AC-02-06CH11357.
A prototype injector capable to produce multiple-charge-state heavy-ion beams is being developed at ANL. The injector consists of an ECR ion source, a 100 kV platform and a Low Energy Beam Transport (LEBT). The latter comprises two 60-degree bending magnets, electrostatic triplets and beam diagnostics stations. Several charge states of bismuth ions from the ECR have been extracted, accelerated to an energy of 1.8 MeV, separated and then recombined into a high quality beam ready for further acceleration. This technique allows us to double heavy-ion beam intensity in high-power driver linac for future radioactive beam facility. The other application is the post-accelerators of radioactive ions based on charge breeders. The intensity of rare isotope beams can be doubled or even tripled by the extraction and acceleration of multiple charge state beams. We will report the results of emittance measurements of multiple-charge state beams after recombination.

 
TH301 Beam Dynamics Studies of the 8 GeV Linac at FNAL 760
 
  • P.N. Ostroumov, B. Mustapha
    ANL, Argonne
  • J.-P. Carneiro
    Fermilab, Batavia
 
 

Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Scince, under contracts number DE-AC02-06CH11357 and No. W-31-109-ENG-38.
The proposed 8 GeV proton driver (PD) linac at FNAL includes a front end up to ~420 MeV and a high energy section operating at 325 MHz and 1300 MHz respectively. A normal conducting RFQ and short H-type resonators are being developed for the initial acceleration of the H-minus or proton beam up to 10 MeV. From 10 MeV to ~420 MeV the voltage gain is provided by SC spoke-loaded cavities. In the high-energy section, the acceleration will be provided by the International Linear Collider (ILC)-style SC elliptical cell cavities. To employ the existing readily available klystrons, an rf power fan out from high-power klystrons to multiple cavities is being developed. The beam dynamics simulation code TRACK available in both serial and parallel versions has been updated to include H-minus stripping due to all known mechanisms to predict the exact location of beam losses. An iterative procedure has been developed to interact with the transient beam loading model taking into account feedback and feedforward systems applied for the rf distribution from one klystron to multiple cavities.

 

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TH303 Towards a Model Driven Accelerator with Petascale Computing 766
 
  • B. Mustapha, P.N. Ostroumov, J. Xu
    ANL, Argonne
 
 

Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Contract No. DE-AC-02-06CH11357.
Accelerator simulations still do not provide everything designers and operators need to deploy a new facility with confidence. This is mainly because of limitations preventing realistic, fast-turnaround, end-to-end simulations of the beam from the source all the way through to a final interaction point and because of limitations in on-line monitoring that prevent a full characterization of the actual beam line. As a result, once a machine is built there can be a gap between the expected behavior of the machine and the actual behavior. This gap often corresponds to enormous work and significant delays in commissioning a new machine. To address the shortcomings of the existing beam dynamics simulation codes, and to fulfill the requirements of future hadron and heavy-ion machines, a starting point for a realistic simulation tool is being developed at ANL that will support detailed design evaluation and also fast turnaround computation to support commissioning and operation of the facility. The proposed simulations will be performed on the fast growing computing facility at ANL with peta-scale capability.

 

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