Author: Foley, M.H.
Paper Title Page
MOPO003 650 MHz Cryomodules for Project X at Fermilab – Requirements and Concepts 34
 
  • T.J. Peterson, M.H. Foley, C.M. Ginsburg, C.J. Grimm, J.S. Kerby, Y. Orlov
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
  • R. Ghosh, G. Gilankar, A. Jain, P. Khare, P.K. Kush, A. Laxminarayanan
    RRCAT, Indore (M.P.), India
 
  Cryomodules containing 650 MHz superconducting niobium RF cavities and associated components (input couplers, tuners, instrumentation, etc.) will be developed for Project X, a proposed high intensity proton accelerator facility based on an H linear accelerator at Fermilab. This paper describes the requirements of the 650 MHz cryomodules and the implications of those requirements for the cryomodule design. Cryomodule string segmentation, integration with the cryogenic system, features for maintainability and access, piping and emergency venting considerations, pressure vessel issues, and thermal and mechanical design concepts will be described.  
poster icon Poster MOPO003 [0.788 MB]  
 
MOPO024 Design of Single Spoke Resonators for Project X 122
 
  • L. Ristori, S. Barbanotti, P. Berrutti, M.S. Champion, M.H. Foley, C.M. Ginsburg, I.G. Gonin, C.J. Grimm, T.N. Khabiboulline, D. Passarelli, N. Solyak, A. Vostrikov, V.P. Yakovlev
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
 
  Funding: Operated by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
Project X is based on a 3 GeV CW superconducting linac and is currently in the R&D phase awaiting CD-0 approval. The low-energy section of the Project X H linac (starting at 2.5 MeV) includes three types of super-conducting single spoke cavities operating at 325 MHz. The first three cryomodules will each house 7 SSR0 cavities at β = 0.11. The following two cryomodules will each contain 10 SSR1 cavities each at β = 0.21. The last four cryomodules will contain 11 SSR2 cavities each at β = 0.4. Single spoke cavities were selected for the linac in virtue of their higher r/Q values compared to standard Half Wave Resonator. Quarter Wave Resonators were not considered for such a high frequency. In this paper we present the decisions and analyses that lead to the final design of SSR0. Electro-magnetic and mechanical finite element analyses were performed with the purpose of optimizing the electro-magnetic design, minimizing frequency shifts due to helium bath pressure fluctuations and providing a pressure rating for the resonators that allow their use in the cryomodules.
 
 
THIOA07 Single-cell SC Cavity Development in India 659
 
  • A. Puntambekar, J. Dwivedi, P.D. Gupta, S.C. Joshi, G. Mundra, P. Shrivastava
    RRCAT, Indore (M.P.), India
  • C.A. Cooper, M.H. Foley, T.N. Khabiboulline, C.S. Mishra, J.P. Ozelis, A.M. Rowe
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
  • P.N. Potukuchi
    IUAC, New Delhi, India
  • G. Wu
    ANL, Argonne, USA
 
  Under Indian Institutions and Fermilab Collaboration (IIFC), Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology (RRCAT) Indore, India has initiated the development of SCRF cavity technology in collaboration with Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (FNAL) USA. The R & D efforts are focused on the proposed Project-X accelerator complex at FNAL and High Intensity Proton Accelerator activities in India. As an initial effort, two prototype 1.3 GHz single cell bulk niobium cavities have been developed in collaboration with the Inter University Accelerator Centre (IUAC), New Delhi. Learning from the experience gained and the initial results of these prototypes (achieving Eacc ~23 MV/m), two more improved 1.3 GHz single cell cavities are being developed. These two improved single cell cavities will also be processed and tested at FNAL. Development of a 1.3 GHz, 5-cell SCRF cavity with simple end groups, development of end group, and fabrication of a single -cell 650 MHz (β=0.9) prototype cavity are being undertaken as the next stage in these efforts. This paper will present the development and test results on the 1.3 GHz single cell cavities and status of the ongoing work.  
slides icon Slides THIOA07 [2.937 MB]