Keyword: accelerating-gradient
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MOP095 Experimental Determination of Damage Threshold Characteristics of IR Compatible Optical Materials laser, electron, site, photon 277
 
  • K. Soong, E.R. Colby, C. McGuinness
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • R.L. Byer, E.A. Peralta
    Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work funded by DOE contract DE‐AC02‐76SF00515 (SLAC)
The accelerating gradient in a laser-driven dielectric accelerating structure is often limited by the laser damage threshold of the structure. For a given laser-driven dielectric accelerator design, we can maximize the accelerating gradient by choosing the best combination of the accelerator’s constituent material and operating wavelength. We present here a model of the damage mechanism from ultrafast infrared pulses and compare that model with experimental measurements of the damage threshold of bulk silicon. Additionally, we present experimental measurements of a variety of candidate materials, thin films, and nanofabricated accelerating structures.
 
 
MOP112 Study of Enhanced Transformer Ratio in a Coaxial Dielectric Wakefield Accelerator using a Profiled Drive Bunch Train wakefield, simulation, acceleration, collider 304
 
  • G.V. Sotnikov
    NSC/KIPT, Kharkov, Ukraine
  • J.L. Hirshfield
    Yale University, Physics Department, New Haven, CT, USA
  • T.C. Marshall, G.V. Sotnikov
    Omega-P, Inc., New Haven, Connecticut, USA
 
  Funding: The research was supported by US Department of Energy, Office of High Energy Physics, Advanced Accelerator R & D.
A key parameter of wakefield acceleration is the transformer ratio T. For a dielectric wakefield accelerator, it has been suggested to use a ramped drive bunch train (RBT), or a multizone dielectric structure to enhance T. Here we show the possibility of greatly improving the RBT technique by the use of a numerical algorithm. We study a two-channel 28 GHz structure with two nested Alumina cylindrical shells (CDWA) which is to be excited by a train of four annular bunches having energy 14 MeV and axial RMS size 1mm; the total charge of bunches is 200 nC. For bunch charge and spacing chosen for optimum acceleration gradient, or for optimizing T using the standard method, we obtain T~3.6. We found that if the charge ratios are 1.0:2.4:3.5:5.0 and the spaces between the bunches are 2.5, 2.5, and 4.5 wakefield periods, then T~17. The RBT also can be used successfully in a high gradient THz CDWA structure.
* C.Jing et.al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 144801, (2007)
** C. Wang, et.al. Proc. PAC 2005. IEEE, 2005, p.1333.
*** G. Sotnikov et.al. PRST-AB, 061302 (2009).
 
 
TUP066 Three-cell Traveling-wave Superconducting Test Structure cavity, feedback, controls, linac 940
 
  • P.V. Avrakhov, A. Kanareykin
    Euclid TechLabs, LLC, Solon, Ohio, USA
  • S. Kazakov, N. Solyak, G. Wu, V.P. Yakovlev
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
 
  Use of a superconducting traveling wave accelerating (STWA) structure* with a small phase advance per cell rather than a standing wave structure may provide a significant increase of the accelerating gradient in the ILC linac. For the same surface electric and magnetic fields the STWA achieves an accelerating gradient 1.2 larger than TESLA-like standing wave cavities. The STWA allows also longer acceleration cavities, reducing the number of gaps between them. However, the STWA structure requires a SC feedback waveguide to return the few hundreds of MW of circulating RF power from the structure output to the structure input. A test single-cell cavity with feedback was designed, manufactured and successfully tested** demonstrating the possibility of a proper processing to achieve a high accelerating gradient. These results open the way to take the next step of the TW SC cavity development: to build and test a traveling-wave three-cell cavity with a feedback waveguide. The latest results of the single-cell cavity tests are discussed as well as the design of the test 3-cell TW cavity.
* P. Avrakhov, et al, Phys. of Part. and Nucl. Let, 2008, Vol. 5, No. 7, p. 597
** G. Wu, et al, IPAC 2010, THPD048
 
 
TUP108 Summary Report for the C50 Cryomodule Project cryomodule, cavity, vacuum, electron 1044
 
  • M.A. Drury, G.K. Davis, J.F. Fischer, C. Grenoble, J. Hogan, L.K. King, K. Macha, J.D. Mammosser, C.E. Reece, A.V. Reilly, J. Saunders, H. Wang
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia, USA
  • E. Daly, J.P. Preble
    ITER Organization, St. Paul lez Durance, France
 
  Funding: Authored by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC under U.S. DOE Contract DE-AC05-06OR23177.
The Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility has recently completed the C50 cryomodule refurbishment project. The goal of this project was to enable robust 6 GeV, 5 pass operation of the Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator Facility (CEBAF). The scope of the project included removal, refurbishment and reinstallation of ten CEBAF cryomodules at a rate of three per year. The refurbishment process included reprocessing of SRF cavities to eliminate field emission and to increase the nominal gradient from the original 5 MV/m to 12.5 MV/m. New “dogleg“ couplers were installed between the cavity and helium vessel flanges to intercept secondary electrons that produce arcing in the fundamental Power Coupler (FPC). Other changes included new ceramic RF windows for the air to vacuum interface of the FPC and improvements to the mechanical tuner. Damaged or worn components were replaced as well. All ten of the refurbished cryomodules are now installed in CEBAF and are currently operational. This paper will summarize the performance of the cryomodules. This paper will also look at problems that must be addressed by future refurbishment projects.
The U.S. Government retains a non-exclusive, paid-up, irrevocable, world-wide license to publish or reproduce this manuscript for U.S. Government purposes.
 
 
WEP032 Beam Transport in a Compact Dielectric Wall Accelerator for Proton Therapy proton, beam-transport, emittance, focusing 1552
 
  • Y.-J. Chen, D.T. Blackfield, G.J. Caporaso, S.D. Nelson, B. R. Poole
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work performed under the auspices of the U. S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA2A27344.
To attain the highest accelerating gradient in the compact dielectric wall (DWA) accelerator, the accelerating voltage pulses should have the shortest possible duration. To do so, the DWA will be operated in the “virtual” traveling mode*. Since only a short section of HGI wall would be excited, the accelerating field’s axial profile could be non-uniform and time dependent, especially near the entrance and exit of the DWA, which could lead to dispersion in beam acceleration and transport, and eventually emittance growth. The dispersive transverse kick on a short proton bunch at the DWA entrance and its impact on acceptable input proton bunch length will be discussed. Without using any external lenses, the dispersive transverse kicks on the beam can be mitigated. Implementing the mitigations into the transport strategy, we have established a baseline transport case. Results of simulations using 3-D, EM PIC code, LSP** indicate that the DWA transport performance meets the medical specifications for intensity modulation proton treatment. Sensitivity of the transport performance to the switch timing will be presented.
* G. J. Caporaso, Y-J Chen and S. E. Sampayan, "The Dielectric Wall Accelerator", Rev. of Accelerator Science and Technology, vol. 2, p. 253 (2009).
** Alliant Techsystems Inc., http://www.lspsuite.com/.
 
 
THOCS1 Would >50 MV/m be Possible with Superconducting RF Cavities? cavity, superconducting-RF, electron, controls 2119
 
  • T. Tajima
    LANL, Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA
 
  Several laboratories are working on the development of thin-film superconductor technology to overcome the fundamental limit of ~50 MV/m accelerating gradient with niobium SRF cavities. Efforts at LANL attempt to enhance the sustainable surface magnetic field by coating thin layers of superconductors, such as MgB2 on top of niobium. The coating techniques being developed and the results of RF critical field and surface resistance measurements that were obtained in collaboration with other national laboratories, universities and industry will be presented.  
slides icon Slides THOCS1 [0.751 MB]