Author: Scarvie, T.
Paper Title Page
TUP195 Commissioning the ALS Digital Power Supply Controller in the Booster Dipole and Quadrupole Magnet Power Supplies 1190
 
  • J.M. Weber, T. Scarvie, C. Steier, CA. Timossi
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.
The Advanced Light Source (ALS) is a third generation synchrotron light source that has been operating since 1993 at Berkeley Lab. A few years ago, the ALS was upgraded to achieve Top-Off Mode, which required replacing the booster dipole and quadrupole magnet power supplies to increase the peak booster beam energy from 1.5GeV to 1.9GeV. The original analog controller for each power supply has been replaced by a digital power supply controller (DPSC) to improve stability and resolution and provide a remote interface. The DPSC capabilities include 24-bit 100k-point digital reference waveform download and voltage reference generation, and complete digital current loop implementation. The hardware includes an FPGA with an embedded processor running a full EPICS IOC on VxWorks. This paper will present the current functionality of the DPSC as well as performance results from recent commissioning.

 
 
TUOCS3 Status of the ALS Upgrade 769
 
  • C. Steier, B.J. Bailey, A. Biocca, A.T. Black, D. Colomb, N. Li, A. Madur, S. Marks, H. Nishimura, G.C. Pappas, G.J. Portmann, S. Prestemon, D. Robin, S.L. Rossi, F. Sannibale, T. Scarvie, D. Schlueter, C. Sun, W. Wan
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231
The Advanced Light Source (ALS) at Berkeley Lab is one of the earliest 3rd generation light sources. Over the years substantial upgrades have been implemented to keep the facility at the forefront of soft x-ray sources. The most recent one is a multi-year upgrade, that includes new and replacement x-ray beamlines, a replacement of many of the original insertion devices and many upgrades to the accelerator. The accelerator upgrade that affects the ALS performance most directly is the ALS brightness upgrade, which will reduce the horizontal emittance from 6.3 to 2.2 nm. This will result in a brightness increase by a factor of three for bend magnet beamlines and at least a factor of two for insertion device beamlines and will keep the ALS competitive with newer sources.
 
slides icon Slides TUOCS3 [4.970 MB]