Paper | Title | Page |
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MOPLB10 | FRIB Technology Demonstration Cryomodule Test | 165 |
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A Technology Demonstration Cryomodule (TDCM) has been developed for a systems test of technology being developed for FRIB. The TDCM consists of two half wave resonators (HWRs) which have been designed for an optimum velocity of β=v/c=0.53 and a resonant frequency of 322 MHz. The resonators operate at 2 K. A superconducting 9 T solenoid is placed in close proximity to one of the installed HWRs. The 9 T solenoid operates at 4 K. A complete systems test of the cavities, magnets, and all ancillary components is presented in this paper.
This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE SC0000661. |
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Slides MOPLB10 [2.530 MB] | ||
TUPB058 | An Analytical Cavity Model for Fast Linac-Beam Tuning | 609 |
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Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE-SC0000661 Non-axisymmetric RF cavities can produce axially asymmetric acceleration fields. Conventional method using numerical 3-D field tracking to address this feature is time-consuming and thus not appropriate for on-line beam tuning applications. In this paper, we develop analytical treatment of non-axisymmetric RF cavities. Multipole models of cavities are derived using realistic 3-D field in both longitudinal and transverse dimensions. Then, beam dynamics formulism is established. Finally, special case of FRIB quarter-wave resonators are calculated by the model and benchmarked against 3-D field tracking to ensure the efficiency and accuracy of the model. |
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TUPB060 | Multipacting Suppression Modeling for Half Wave Resonator and RF Coupler* | 612 |
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Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE-SC0000661 In prototype cryomodule test of Facility of Rare Isotope Beam (FRIB) β=0.53 half-wave-resonators (HWRs) severe multipacting barriers, prevented RF measurement at the full field specified. The multipacting could not be removed by several hours of RF conditioning. To better understand and to eliminate multipacting, physics models and CST simulations have been developed for both cavity and RF coupler. The simulations have good agreement with the multipacting discovered in coupler and cavity testing. Proposed cavity and coupler geometric optimizations are discussed in this paper. |
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TUPB061 | ADRC Control for Beam Loading and Microphonics | 615 |
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Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE-SC0000661 Superconducting RF (SRF) cavities are subject to many disturbances such as beam loading and microphonics. Although we implemented Proportional Integral (PI) control and Active Disturbance Rejection Control (ADRC) in the Low Level RF (LLRF) system at FRIB to stabilize the RF field, the control loop gains are inadequate in the presence of beam loading and microphonics. An improved scheme is proposed and simulated with much higher gains are achieved. The feasibility to include piezo tuner in ADRC and PI circuit is also presented in this paper. |
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MOPB090 | FRIB Technology Demonstration Cryomodule Test | 386 |
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A Technology Demonstration Cryomodule (TDCM) has been developed for a systems test of technology being developed for FRIB. The TDCM consists of two half wave resonators (HWRs) which have been designed for an optimum velocity of β=v/c=0.53 and a resonant frequency of 322 MHz. The resonators operate at 2 K. A superconducting 9 T solenoid is placed in close proximity to one of the installed HWRs. The 9 T solenoid operates at 4 K. A complete systems test of the cavities, magnets, and all ancillary components is presented in this paper.
This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE SC0000661. |
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TU1A04 | FRIB Accelerator Status and Challenges | 417 |
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Funding: This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE-SC0000661 The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) at MSU includes a driver linac that can accelerate all stable isotopes to energies beyond 200 MeV/u at beam powers up to 400 kW. The linac consists of 330 superconducting quarter- and half-wave resonators operating at 2 K temperature. Physical challenges include acceleration of multiple charge states of beams to meet beam-on-target requirements, efficient production and acceleration of intense heavy-ion beams from low to intermediate energies, accommodation of multiple charge stripping scenarios (liquid lithium, helium gas, and carbon foil) and ion species, designs for both baseline in-flight fragmentation and ISOL upgrade options, and design considerations of machine availability, tunability, reliability, maintainability, and upgradability. We report on the FRIB accelerator design and developments with emphasis on technical challenges and progress. |
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Slides TU1A04 [4.531 MB] | ||
TUPB040 | Status of the Linac SRF Acquisition for FRIB | 564 |
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Funding: This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE SC0000661. The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) will utilize a high-intensity, superconducting heavy-ion driver linac to provide stable ion beams from protons to uranium up to energies of >200 MeV/u and at a beam power of up to 400 kW. The ions are accelerated to about 0.5 MeV/u using a room-temperature 80.5 MHz RFQ and injected into a superconducting cw linac consisting of 330 individual low-beta cavities in 49 cryomodules operating at 2 K. This paper discusses the current status of the linac SRF acquisition strategy as the project phases into construction mode. |
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