A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z    

Zhao, Q.

 
Paper Title Page
TH302 End-to-End Beam Simulations for the MSU RIA Driver Linac 594
 
  • X. Wu, M. Doleans, D. Gorelov, T.L. Grimm, F. Marti, R.C. York, Q. Zhao
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan
 
  The Rare Isotope Accelerator (RIA) driver linac proposed by Michigan State University (MSU) will use a 10th sub-harmonic based, superconducting, cw linac to accelerate light and heavy ions to final energies of ≤400 MeV/u with beam powers of 100 to 400 kW. The driver linac uses superconducting quarter-wave, half-wave, and six-cell elliptical cavities with frequencies ranging from 80.5 MHz to 805 MHz for acceleration, and superconducting solenoids and room temperature quadrupoles for transverse focusing. For the heavier ions, two stages of charge-stripping and multiple-charge-state acceleration will be used to meet the beam power requirements and to minimize the requisite accelerating voltage. End-to-end, three-dimensional (3D), beam dynamics simulations from the ECR to the radioactive beam production targets have been performed. These studies include a 3D analysis of multi-charge-state beam acceleration, evaluation of transverse misalignment and rf errors on the machine performance, modeling of the charge-stripping and stripping-chicane performance, and beam switchyard design. The results of these beam dynamics studies will be presented, and further planned beam dynamics studies will be discussed.  
Transparencies
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.