Author: Vlieks, A.E.
Paper Title Page
MOP015 An X-band Gun Test Area at SLAC 133
 
  • C. Limborg-Deprey, C. Adolphsen, T.S. Chu, M.P. Dunning, C. Hast, R.K. Jobe, E.N. Jongewaard, A.E. Vlieks, D.R. Walz, F. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • S.G. Anderson, F.V. Hartemann, T.L. Houck, R.A. Marsh
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the U.S. DOE Contract No. DE-AC03-76SF00515
The XTA (X-Band Test Area) is being assembled in the NLCTA tunnel of the SLAC National Laboratory to serve as a test facility for new RF guns. The first gun to be tested will be an upgraded version of the 5.6 cell, 200MV/m peak field X-band designed at SLAC in 2003 for the Compton Scattering experiment run in ASTA. This new version includes some features implemented in 2006 on the LCLS gun such as racetrack couplers, increased mode separation and elliptical irises. These upgrades were discussed in collaboration with LLNL since the same gun will be used as a driver for the LLNL Gamma-ray Source. Our beamline includes an X-band accelerating section which takes the electron beam up to 100 MeV and an electron beam measurement station. Other X-Band guns such as the UCLA Hybrid gun will be characterized at our facility.
 
 
MOP128 An Optimized X-band Photoinjector Design for the LLNL MEGa-Ray Project 334
 
  • S.G. Anderson, F. Albert, C.P.J. Barty, G.A. Deis, C.A. Ebbers, D.J. Gibson, F.V. Hartemann, T.L. Houck, R.A. Marsh
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
  • C. Adolphsen, A.E. Candel, E.N. Jongewaard, Z. Li, C. Limborg-Deprey, T.O. Raubenheimer, S.G. Tantawi, A.E. Vlieks, F. Wang, J.W. Wang, F. Zhou
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.
We present an optimized 5 + ½ cell, X-band photoinjector designed to produce 7 MeV, 250 pC, sub-micron emittance electron bunches for the LLNL Mono-Energetic Gamma-Ray (MEGa-Ray) light source. This LLNL/SLAC collaboration modifies a design previously demonstrated to sustain 200 MV/m on-axis accelerating fields*. We discuss the photoinjector operating point, optimized by scaling beam dynamics from S-band photo-guns and by evaluation of the MEGa-Ray source requirements. The RF structure design is presented along with the current status of the photoinjector construction and testing.
*A.E. Vlieks, et al., High Energy Density and High Power RF: 6th Workshop, AIP, CP691, p. 358 (2003).
 
 
THOAS1 On the Importance of Symmetrizing RF Coupler Fields for Low Emittance Beams 2044
 
  • Z. Li, C. Adolphsen, A.E. Vlieks, F. Zhou
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work was supported by DOE Contract No. DE-AC02-76SF00515 and used computing resources at NERSC supported by DOE Contract No. DE-AC02- 05CH11231.
The input power of accelerator structure is normally fed through a coupling slot(s) on the outer wall of the accelerator structure via magnetic coupling. While providing perfect matching, the coupling slots may produce non-axial-symmetric fields in the coupler cell that can induce emittance growth as the beam is accelerated in such a field. This effect is especially important for low emittance beams at low energies such as in the injector accelerators for light sources. In this paper, we present studies of multipole fields of different rf coupler designs and their effect on beam emittance for an X-band photocathode gun, being jointly designed with LLNL, and the X-band accelerator structures. We will present symmetrized rf coupler designs for these components to preserve the beam emittance.
 
slides icon Slides THOAS1 [1.512 MB]  
 
TUP023 X-Band RF Photoinjector Research and Development at LLNL 859
 
  • R.A. Marsh, S.G. Anderson, C.P.J. Barty, G.K. Beer, R.R. Cross, G.A. Deis, C.A. Ebbers, D.J. Gibson, F.V. Hartemann, T.L. Houck
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
  • C. Adolphsen, A.E. Candel, T.S. Chu, E.N. Jongewaard, Z. Li, C. Limborg-Deprey, T.O. Raubenheimer, S.G. Tantawi, A.E. Vlieks, F. Wang, J.W. Wang, F. Zhou
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, and funded by DHS Domestic Nuclear Detection Office
In support of Compton scattering gamma-ray source efforts at LLNL, a multi-bunch test station is being developed to investigate accelerator optimization for future upgrades. This test station will enable work to explore the science and technology paths required to boost the current mono-energetic gamma-ray (MEGa-Ray) technology a higher effective repetition rate, potentially increasing the average gamma-ray brightness by two orders of magnitude. The test station will consist of a 5.5 cell X-band rf photoinjector, single accelerator section, and beam diagnostics. Beam quality must be exceedingly high in order to produce narrow-bandwidth gamma-rays, requiring a robust state of the art photoinjector. The photoinjector will be a high gradient (200 MV/m cathode field) standing wave structure, featuring a dual feed racetrack coupler, elliptical irises, and an optimized first cell length. Detailed design of the rf photoinjector for this test station is complete, and will be presented with modeling simulations, and layout plans.
 
 
TUP132 50 MW X-Band RF System for a Photoinjector Test Station at LLNL 1082
 
  • T.L. Houck, S.G. Anderson, C.P.J. Barty, G.K. Beer, R.R. Cross, G.A. Deis, C.A. Ebbers, D.J. Gibson, F.V. Hartemann, R.A. Marsh
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
  • C. Adolphsen, A.E. Candel, T.S. Chu, E.N. Jongewaard, Z. Li, T.O. Raubenheimer, S.G. Tantawi, A.E. Vlieks, F. Wang, J.W. Wang, F. Zhou
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, and funded by DHS Domestic Nuclear Detection Office.
In support of x-band photoinjector development efforts at LLNL, a 50 MW test station is being constructed to investigate structure and photocathode optimization for future upgrades. A SLAC XL-4 klystron capable of generating 50 MW, 1.5 microsecond pulses will be the high power RF source for the system. The timing of the laser pulse on the photocathode with the applied RF field places very stringent requirements on phase jitter and drift. To achieve these requirements, the klystron will be powered by a state of the art, solid-state, high voltage modulator. The 50 MW of RF power will be divided between the photoinjector and a traveling wave accelerator section. A high power phase shifter is located between the photoinjector and accelerator section to adjust the phasing of the electron bunches with respect to the accelerating field. A variable attenuator is included on the input of the photoinjector. The distribution system including the various x-band components is being designed and constructed. In this paper, we will present the design, layout, and status of the RF system.
 
 
THP182 Overview of Current Progress on the LLNL Nuclear Photonics Facility and Mono-energetic Gamma-ray Source 2456
 
  • F.V. Hartemann, F. Albert, S.G. Anderson, C.P.J. Barty, A.J. Bayramian, R.R. Cross, C.A. Ebbers, D.J. Gibson, T.L. Houck, R.A. Marsh, D.P. McNabb, M. J. Messerly, C. Siders
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
  • C. Adolphsen, T.S. Chu, E.N. Jongewaard, T.O. Raubenheimer, S.G. Tantawi, A.E. Vlieks, F. Wang, J.W. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344
A new class of gamma-ray light source based on Compton scattering is made possible by recent progress in accelerator physics and laser technology. Mono-energetic gamma-rays are produced from collisions between a high-brightness, relativistic electron beam and a high intensity laser pulse produced via chirped-pulse amplification (CPA). A precision, tunable gamma-ray source driven by a compact, high-gradient X-band linac is currently under development and construction at LLNL. High-brightness, relativistic electron bunches produced by an X-band linear accelerator designed in collaboration with SLAC will interact with a Joule-class, 10 ps, diode-pumped CPA laser pulse to generate tunable gamma-rays in the 0.5-2.5 MeV photon energy range via Compton scattering. The source will be used to conduct nuclear resonance fluorescence experiments and address a broad range of current and emerging applications in nuclear photoscience. Users include homeland security, stockpile science and surveillance, nuclear fuel assay, and waste imaging and assay. The source design, key parameters, and current status are presented, along with important applications.