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MOODS5 | 3D Electromagnetic Design and Beam Dynamics Simulations of a Radio-Frequency Quadrupole | simulation, cavity, target, linac | 97 |
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Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. During the design of the 60.635 MHz RFQ for the ATLAS efficiency and intensity upgrade*, we have established a new full 3D approach for the electromagnetic and beam dynamics simulations of a RFQ. A Detailed full 3D model (four meter long) including vane modulation was built and simulated using CST Microwave Studio, which is made possible by the ever advancing computing capabilities. The approach was validated using experimental measurements on a prototype 57.5 MHz RFQ**. The effects of the radial matchers, vane modulation and tuners on the resonant frequency and field flatness have been carefully studied. The full 3D field distribution was used for beam dynamics simulations using both CST Particle Studio and the beam dynamics code TRACK***. In the final design we have used trapezoidal modulation instead of the standard sinusoidal in the accelerating section of the RFQ to achieve more energy gain for the same length, following the leading work of the Protvino group****. In our case, the output energy increased from 260 keV/u to 295 keV/u with minimal change in the beam dynamics. * P.N. Ostroumov et al, Proceedings of LINAC-2010 ** P.N. Ostroumov et al, Proceedings of LINAC-2006 *** TRACK @ http://www.phy.anl.gov/atlas/TRACK **** O.K. Belyaev et al, Proceedings of LINAC-2000 |
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Slides MOODS5 [2.531 MB] | ||
MOODS6 | Beam Dynamics Simulations on the ESS Bilbao RFQ | simulation, emittance, cavity, acceleration | 100 |
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Funding: European Spallation Source - Bilbao The Bilbao Accelerator RFQ is aimed to accelerate a 75 mA proton beam from 75 keV to 3 MeV, while keeping the beam both transversely and longitudinally focused, and presenting a minimum emittance growth. We report on the current status of the project, mainly focusing on the Beam Dynamics aspects of the design. Several particle simulations are carried out with RFQSIM, GPT and TRACK codes, in order to study the particle transmission of the RFQ under several circumstances, such as different current levels, vane geometry changes due to thermal stress, and different input beam characteristics obtained by changing the LEBT operation settings. |
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Slides MOODS6 [3.264 MB] | ||
MOP184 | Beam Instrumentation for the European Spallation Source | linac, diagnostics, cryomodule, target | 432 |
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The European Spallation Source, which will be built in the south of Sweden, is a neutron source based on a 5MW, 2.5GeV proton linac. The project is currently in the design update phase, and will deliver a Technical Design Report at the end of 2012. Construction is expected to begin in 2013. This paper discusses the initial beam diagnostics specifications, along with some possible instrument design options. | |||
TUP014 | Broad-band Beam Chopper for a CW Proton Linac at Fermilab | kicker, coupling, linac, emittance | 838 |
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The specifications and the initial conceptual ides for a broad-band proton chopper for a Fermilab Project X linac will be presented. The chopper will form bunch patterns required by physics experiments and will work with downstream beam splitter, allowing for a variable bunch pattern to be delivered to up to three experiment concurrently. | |||
TUP091 | Electromagnetic Design of a Multi-harmonic Buncher for the FRIB Driver Linac | linac, ion, vacuum, coupling | 1000 |
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Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Grant Number DE-FGO2-08ER41553. The driver linac for the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) at MSU will produce primary beams of ions at ≥200 MeV/u for nuclear physics research. A dc ion beam from an ECR ion source will be pre-bunched upstream of the radio frequency quadrupole linac. A multi-harmonic buncher (MHB) was designed for this purpose, using experience gained with a similar buncher for the ReA3 re-accelerator linac, which is presently being commissioned at MSU. The FRIB MHB resonator operates with three frequencies (40.25 MHz, 80.5 MHz, and 120.75 MHz) to produce an approximately linear sawtooth in the voltage as a function of time. The three resonant frequencies are produced via two quarter-wave resonators with a common gridless gap: one resonator is driven at its fundamental mode at 40.25 MHz and its first higher-order mode (120.75 MHz), while the other is driven only at its fundamental mode of 80.5 MHz. The electromagnetic design of the MHB resonator will be presented, including the electrode design and tuning mechanisms. |
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TUP273 | RF Thermal and Structural Analysis of the 60.625 MHz RFQ for the ATLAS Upgrade | linac, cavity, gun, ion | 1334 |
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Funding: This work was supported by Argonne National Lab under contract # 0F-32402 The upgrade for the ATLAS facility is designed to increase the efficiency and intensity of beams for the user facility*, **. This will be accomplished with a new CW normal conducting RFQ, which will increase both transverse and longitudinal acceptance of the LINAC. This RFQ must operate over a wide range of power levels to accelerate ion species from protons to uranium. The RFQ design is a split coaxial structure and is made of OFE copper. The geometry of the design must be stable during operation. Engineering studies of the design at different RF power levels were conducted to ensure that the geometry requirements were met. Frequency shift analysis was also completed to determine the effects of high power levels. Thermal stress analysis was completed to show that the structure frequency is repeatable. *P.N. Ostroumov, et.al, “A New Atlas Efficiency and Intensity Upgrade Project,” SRF2009, tuppo016 **P.N. Ostroumov, et.al., “Efficiency and Intensity Upgrade of the Atlas Facility,” LINAC 2010, MOP045 |
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TUP279 | A CW RFQ Prototype | simulation, dipole, linac, vacuum | 1352 |
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A short RFQ prototype was built for tests of high power RFQ structures. We will study thermal effects and determine critical points of the design. HF-simulations with CST Microwave Studio and measurements were done. The RF-tests with continues power of 20 kW/m and simulations of thermal effects with ALGOR were finished successfully. Optimization of some details of the facility are on focus now. First results and the status of the project will be presented. | |||
WEOBS6 | Status and Specifications of a Project X Front-End Accelerator Test Facility at Fermilab | cavity, linac, ion-source, proton | 1430 |
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Funding: Operated by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the United States Department of Energy. This paper describes the construction and operational status of an accelerator test facility for Project X. The purpose of this facility is for Project X component development activities that benefit from beam tests and any development activities that require 325 MHz or 650 MHz RF power. It presently includes an H- beam line, a 325 MHz superconducting cavity test facility, a 325 MHz (pulsed) RF power source, and a 650 MHz (CW) RF power source. The paper also discusses some specific Project X components that will be tested in the facility. |
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Slides WEOBS6 [2.401 MB] | ||
WEP011 | Low Energy Beam Transport Developments for the Bilbao Accelerator | ion, ion-source, simulation, dipole | 1522 |
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Funding: European Spallation Source - Bilbao In this work we present a future upgrade of the ESS-Bilbao multi-source Low Energy Transport System (LEBT). It consists of a set of solenoids and steering dipoles used to match the characteristics of both ion source beams i.e., the Electron Cyclotron Resonance (ECR) H+/D+ source and the H− Penning source, to the input specifications of the RFQ. Different configurations of the geometry and magnetic fields are studied in order to minimize the emittance growth along the LEBT, while providing the beam specifications required by the RFQ. |
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WEP038 | Physics Design of a Prototype 2-Solenoid LEBT for the SNS Injector | solenoid, ion, simulation, beam-transport | 1564 |
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To mitigate the operational risks associated with the SNS electrostatic LEBT, an R&D effort is underway to develop a 2-solenoid magnetic LEBT, which should improve the reliability while matching or exceeding the beam dynamic capabilities of the present electrostatic LEBT. This paper discusses the physics design of a prototype 2-solenoid magnetic LEBT. | |||
WEP115 | The FNAL Injector Upgrade | extraction, quadrupole, linac, DTL | 1701 |
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The present FNAL linac H− injector has been operational since the 1970s and consists of two magnetron H− sources and a 750keV Cockcroft-Walton Accelerator. In the upgrade, both slit-type magnetron sources will be replaced with circular aperture sources, and the Cockcroft-Walton with a 200MHz RFQ. Operational experience at BNL (Brookhaven National Laboratory) has shown that the upgraded source and RFQ will be more reliable and require less manpower than the present system. | |||
WEP212 | Development of a 325 MHz 4-Rod RFQ | dipole, simulation, linac, resonance | 1888 |
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A 4-Rod RFQ with a frequency of 325 MHz and an output energy of 3 MeV will be build as a part of the FAIR project of GSI. Design studies and model measurements on a short prototype of a 325 MHz 4-Rod RFQ model were made including simulations using CST Microwave Studio. The latest simulation results regarding the dipole field of this structure are presented in this paper. | |||
WEP213 | New Development of a RFQ Beam Matching Section | emittance, ion-source, ion, linac | 1891 |
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Funding: BMBF Funneling is a method to increase low energy beam currents in multiple stages. The Frankfurt Funneling Experiment is a model of such a stage. The experiment is built up of two ion sources with electrostatic lens systems, a Two-Beam-RFQ accelerator, a funneling deflector and a beam diagnostic system. The two beams are bunched and accelerated in a Two-Beam RFQ. A funneling deflector combines the bunches to a common beam axis. Current work is the construction and beam tests of a new beam transport system between RFQ accelerator and deflector. With extended RFQ-electrodes the drift between the Two-Beam-RFQ and the rf-deflector will be minimized and therefore unwanted emittance growth reduced. First rf-measurements with the improved Two-Beam-RFQ will be presented. |
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WEP214 | Tuning Studies on 4-Rod RFQs | simulation, linac, resonance, quadrupole | 1894 |
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For the optimization of Radio Frequency Quadrupole (RFQ) design parameters, a certain voltage distribution along the electrodes of an RFQ is assumed. Therefore an accurate tuning of the voltage distribution is very important for the beam dynamic properties of an RFQ. A variation can lead to particle losses and reduced beam quality. Our electrode design usually implies a constant longitudinal voltage distribution. For its adjustment tuning plates are used between the stems of the 4-Rod RFQ. Their optimal positions can be found by an iterative process. To structure this tuning process simulations with a NI LabVIEW based Tuning Software and CST Microwave ® are performed and compared to measurements of the ReA3-RFQ of the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory (NSCL) at Michigan State University. The results of this studies are presented in this paper. | |||
WEP226 | Commissioning Results of the ReA RFQ at MSU* | ion, cryomodule, emittance, acceleration | 1912 |
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Funding: Project funded by Michigan State University The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) is currently in the preliminary design phase at Michigan State University (MSU). FRIB consists of a driver LINAC for the acceleration of heavy ion beams, followed by a fragmentation target station and a ReAccelerator facility (ReA3). ReA3 comprises gas stopper systems, an Electron Beam Ion Trap (EBIT) charge state booster, a room temperature radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ), a LINAC using superconducting quarter wave resonators and an achromatic beam transport and distribution line to the new experimental area. Beams from ReA3 will range from 3 MeV/u for heavy ions to about 6 MeV/u for light ions. The ReA3 RFQ, which is of the 4 rod type, is designed to accelerate ions with an Q/A of 0.2 to 0.5 from 12 keV/u to 600 keV/u. The RFQ operates at a frequency of 80.5 MHz and power levels up to 120 kW at 10% duty factor. In this paper we will report on commissioning results from the ReA3 RFQ using a H2+ and He+ beam from an auxiliary ion source. |
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WEP241 | Beam Dynamics Simulations and Measurements at the Project X Test Facility | dipole, quadrupole, simulation, focusing | 1933 |
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Funding: Work supported by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. DOE Project X, under study at Fermilab, is a multi task SRF beam facility, aiming to provide high intensity protons for rare processes experiments and nuclear physics at low energy, and simultaneously for the production of neutrinos, as well as muon beams in the long term. A beam test facility - former known as High Intensity Neutrino Source (HINS) - is under commissioning for testing critical components of the project, e.g. a beam chopper. In this paper we describe the layout of the test facility and present beam dynamics simulations and measurements. |
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WEP261 | Performance of the New EBIS Preinjector | ion, booster, injection, linac | 1966 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy, and by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The construction and initial commissioning phase of a new heavy ion preinjector was completed at Brookhaven in September, 2010, and the preinjector is now operational. This preinjector, using an EBIS source to produce high charge state heavy ions, provided helium and neon ion beams for use at the NASA Space Radiation Laboratory in the Fall of 2010, and gold and uranium beams are being commissioned during the 2011 run cycle for use in RHIC. The EBIS operates with an electron beam current of up to 10 A, to produce mA level currents in 10 to 40 μs beam pulses. The source is followed by an RFQ and IH linac to accelerate ions with q/m > 0.16 to an energy of 2 MeV/amu, for injection into the Booster synchrotron. The performance of the preinjector is presented, including initial operational experience for the NASA and RHIC programs. |
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WEP268 | Changes in LEBT/MEBT at the BNL 200 MeV Linac | linac, polarization, solenoid, emittance | 1978 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. After reconfiguration of the low energy (35 keV) and the medium energy (750 keV) transport lines in 2009-10, the Brookhaven linac is now delivering the highest intensity beam since it was built in 1970 (~120 μA average current of H− to the Brookhaven Linac Isotope Producer). It is also now delivering lower emittance polarized H− ion beam for the polarized program at RHIC. To increase the intensity further, we are replacing the buncher in the 750 keV line with one with higher Q value, to allow operation at higher power. Also, to improve polarization, we are replacing the magnetic solenoid before the RFQ in the 35 keV line by a solenoid-einzel lens combination. The paper will report on the results of these changes. |
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WEP275 | Highly-Persistent SNS H− Source Fueling 1-MW Beams with 7-9 kC Service Cycles | plasma, ion, ion-source, linac | 1993 |
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Funding: SNS is managed by UT-Battelle, LLC, under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725 for the U.S. Department of Energy. Running routinely with ~40-mA, 1-MW beams, the SNS linac is fed from the ion source with ~1ms long, ~50-mA H− beam pulses at 60 Hz. This requires the daily extraction of ~230 C of H− ions, which exceeds the routine daily production of other H− accelerator sources by almost an order of magnitude. The source service cycle has been extended from 2, to 3, to 4, and up to 5.6 weeks without age-related failures. The 7-9 kC of H− ions delivered in single service cycles exceed the service cycle yields of other accelerator sources. The paper discusses the findings as well as the issues and their mitigations, which enabled the simultaneous increase of the beam current, the duty factor, the availability, and the service cycle. |
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THOAS3 | Status of the Oak Ridge Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) RF Systems | klystron, controls, linac, neutron | 2050 |
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The SNS has been delivering production neutrons for five years with first beam delivered to the neutron target at the end of April 2006. On September 18, 2009 SNS officially reached 1 megawatt of beam on target marking the achievement of a decades-old dream of providing a U.S. megawatt class pulsed spallation source. The SNS is now routinely delivering 1 megawatt of beam power to the neutron target at over 85 percent of the scheduled beam time. The present effort is aimed at increasing availability eventually to 95 percent and gradually increasing the intensity to the 1.4 megawatt design level. While the RF systems have performed well since initial installation some improvements have been implemented. This paper provides a review of the SNS RF Systems, an overview of the performance of the various components and a detailed review of RF related issues addressed over the past several years. | |||
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Slides THOAS3 [2.759 MB] | ||
THOCN5 | ATLAS Upgrade | cavity, cryomodule, ion, linac | 2110 |
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Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. ATLAS (Argonne Tandem Linac Accelerator System) upgrade requires several substantial developments in accelerator technologies, such as CW heavy ion RFQ and high-performance cryomodule with low-beta cavities. The upgrade project is well advanced. The physics and engineering design of the RFQ are complete and fabrication of OFE copper parts is in progress. The 3.9-meter length RFQ is composed from 5 strongly coupled segments. High-temperature furnace brazing of the segments is planned for the summer of 2011. The RFQ design includes several innovative features such as trapezoidal vane tip modulation, compact output radial matcher to form an axially symmetric beam. The upgrade project also includes development and construction of a cryomodule containing seven 72.75 MHz SC quarter wave cavities designed for the geometrical β= 0.077 and four SC solenoids. The cavity is designed to obtain an accelerating voltage higher than 2.5 MV. The prototype cavity together with high-power capacitive coupler and piezoelectric tuner has been developed, fabricated and is being tested. This paper reports innovative design features of both RFQ and SRF linac and current status of the project. |
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Slides THOCN5 [3.070 MB] | ||