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Hartung, W.

 
Paper Title Page
TUP76 Adaptive Feedforward Cancellation of Sinusoidal Disturbances in Superconducting RF Cavities 447
 
  • T.H. Kandil, T.L. Grimm, W. Hartung, H. Khalil, J. Popielarski, J. Vincent, R.C. York
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan
 
  A control method, known as adaptive feedforward cancellation (AFC) is applied to damp sinusoidal disturbances due to microphonics in superconducting RF (SRF) cavities. AFC provides a method for damping internal, and external sinusoidal disturbances with known frequencies. It is preferred over other schemes because it uses rudimentary information about the frequency response at the disturbance frequencies, without the necessity of knowing an analytic model (transfer function) of the system. It estimates the magnitude and phase of the sinusoidal disturbance inputs and generates a control signal to cancel their effect. AFC, along with a frequency estimation process, is shown to be very successful in the cancellation of sinusoidal signals from different sources. The results of this research may significantly reduce the power requirements and increase the stability for lightly loaded continuous-wave SRF systems.  
THP03 DESIGN IMPROVEMENT OF THE RIA 80.5 MHZ RFQ 599
 
  • Q. Zhao, V. Andreev, M. Doleans, D. Gorelov, T.L. Grimm, W. Hartung, F. Marti, S.O. Schriber, X. Wu, R.C. York
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan
 
  An 80.5 MHz, continuous-wave, normal-conducting, radio-frequency quadrupole (RFQ) was designed for the front end of the Rare Isotope Accelerator (RIA) driver linac. It will accelerate various ion beams (hydrogen up to uranium) from 12 keV/u to about 300 keV/u. The 4-meter-long RFQ accepts the pre-bunched beam from the low energy beam transport (LEBT) and captures more than 80% with a current of ~0.3 mA. Beam dynamics simulations show that the longitudinal output emittance is small for both single- and two-charge-state ion beams with an external multi-harmonic buncher. A 4-vane resonator with magnetic coupling windows was employed in the cavity design to provide large mode separation, high shunt impedance, and a small transverse dimension. The results of beam dynamics as well as the electromagnetic simulations are presented.  
THP13 Construction of a 161 MHz, β=0.16 Superconducting Quarter Wave Resonator with Steering Correction for RIA 626
 
  • A. Facco
    INFN/LNL, Legnaro, Padova
  • C. Compton, T.L. Grimm, W. Hartung, F. Marti, R.C. York
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan
  • V. Zvyagintsev
    TRIUMF, Vancouver
 
  We have built a 161 MHz, β=0.16 superconducting Quarter Wave Resonator with steering correction for the low beta section of RIA. This bulk niobium, double wall cavity, compatible with both separate vacuum between beam line and cryostats or unified one, was designed in collaboration between MSU-NSCL and LNL. The design is suitable for extension to other frequencies, e.g. to obtain the 80 MHz, β=0.085 cavity required in RIA. The shaped drift tube allows correction of the residual QWR steering that can cause emittance growth especially in light ions; this could make this resonator a good alternative to Half-Wave resonators in high intensity proton-deuteron linacs, like the SPES injector project at LNL. First test results will be presented.  
THP66 Measurement and Control of Microphonics in High Loaded-Q Superconducting RF Cavities 763
 
  • T.L. Grimm, W. Hartung, T.H. Kandil, H. Khalil, J. Popielarski, J. Vincent, R.C. York
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan
  • C. Radcliffe
    MSU, East Lansing, Michigan
 
  Superconducting radio frequency (SRF) linacs with light beam loading, such as the CEBAF upgrade, RIA and energy recovery linacs, operate more efficiently with loaded-Q values >1·107. The narrow band-width puts stringent limits on acceptable levels of vibration, also called microphonics, that detune the SRF cavities. Typical sources of vibration are rotating machinery, fluid fluctuations and ground motion. A prototype RIA 805 MHz v/c=0.47 cryomodule is presently under test in realistic operating conditions [1]. Real-time frequency detuning measurements were made for modulation rates from DC to 1 kHz. At 2 K the maximum frequency deviation was less than 100 Hz peak-to-peak, and was consistent with high loaded-Q operation. The measured modulation spectrum was primarily made up of discrete Fourier components with modulation frequencies less than 80 Hz. Using an accelerometer and helium pressure transducer, the primary sources of vibration were determined to be the high power cryoplant motors and 2 K helium fluctuations. Adaptive feedforward was used to decrease the magnitude of individual Fourier components by four to ten times [2]. Details of the experimental setup and measurements will be presented.

[1] “Experimental Study of an 805 MHz Cryomodule for the Rare Isotope Accelerator”, T.L. Grimm et al., THP70, these proceedings. [2] “Adaptive Feedforward Cancellation (AFC) of Sinusoidal Disturbances in SRF Cavities”, H. Khalil et al., TUP76, these proceedings.

 
Transparencies
THP70 Experimental Study of an 805 MHz Cryomodule for the Rare Isotope Accelerator 773
 
  • T.L. Grimm, S. Bricker, C. Compton, W. Hartung, M. Johnson, F. Marti, J. Popielarski, R.C. York
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan
  • G. Ciovati, P. Kneisel
    Jefferson Lab, Newport News, Virginia
  • L. Turlington
    TJNAF, Newport News, Virginia
 
  The Rare Isotope Accelerator (RIA) driver linac will use superconducting, 805 MHz, 6-cell elliptical cavities with geometric β values of 0.47, 0.61 and 0.81. Each elliptical cavity cryomodule will have four cavities [1]. Room temperature sections between each cryomodule will consist of quadrupole doublets, beam instrumentation, and vacuum systems. Michigan State University (MSU) has designed a compact cryostat that reduces the tunnel cross-section and improves the linac real estate gradient. The cold mass alignment is accomplished with a titanium rail system supported by adjustable nitronic links from the top vacuum plate, and is similar to that used for existing MSU magnet designs. The same concept has also been designed to accommodate the quarter-wave and half-wave resonators with superconducting solenoids used at lower velocity in RIA. Construction of a prototype β=0.47 cryomodule was completed in February 2004 and is presently under test in realistic operating conditions. Experimental results will be presented including: alignment, electromagnetic performance, frequency tuning, cryogenic performance, low-level rf control, and control of microphonics.

[1] “Cryomodule Design for the Rare Isotope Accelerator”, T.L. Grimm, M. Johnson and R.C. York, PAC2003, Portland OR (2003)