Author: Waldschmidt, G.J.
Paper Title Page
WEPAC02 Mode Damping Measurement for the APS Deflecting Cavity 787
 
  • Y. Yang, A. Nassiri, T.L. Smith, G.J. Waldschmidt, G. Wu
    ANL, Argonne, USA
  • H. Wang
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia, USA
  • Y. Yang
    TUB, Beijing, People's Republic of China
 
  The Advanced Photon Source has considered using a deflecting-cavity-based scheme to produce short pulse xrays. A deflecting cavity design has been completed. To verify the simulation result on this cavity, a copper prototype of the design has been fabricated for bench measurement. In this paper, we report our measurement results on this cavity. All the cavity modes below 5 GHz were identified by comparing the field distributions with calculations along different beam paths. After adding the damper, the measured Qexts of those modes were consistent with calculated values, which demonstrated that the cavity damping scheme was sufficient to reduce the wake impedances well below the safety thresholds.  
 
WEPAC44 Higher Order Modes Damping and Multipacting Analysis for the SPX Deflecting Cavity in APS Upgrade 874
 
  • C.-K. Ng, Z. Li, L. Xiao
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • A. Nassiri, G.J. Waldschmidt, G. Wu
    ANL, Argonne, USA
  • R.A. Rimmer, H. Wang
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by US DOE under contract number DE-AC02-06CH11357.
A single-cell superconducting deflecting cavity operating at 2.815 GHz has been proposed and designed for the Short Pulse X-ray (SPX) project for the Advanced Photon Source (APS) upgrade. Each deflecting cavity is equipped with one fundamental power coupler (FPC), one lower order mode (LOM) coupler, and two higher order mode (HOM) couplers to achieve the stringent damping requirements for the unwanted modes. Using the electromagnetic simulation suite ACE3P, HOM damping will be calculated for the cavity including the full engineering design waveguide configurations and rf windows. Trapped modes in the bellows located in the beampipes connecting the cavities in a cryomodule will be computed and their effects on heating evaluated. Furthermore, multipacting activities at the end groups of the cavity will be identified to assess possible problems during high power processing.