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  

Podlech H.

PaperTitlePage
MO403Development of the Superconducting CH-Cavity and Applications to Proton and Ion Acceleration48
 
  • H. Podlech, A. Bechtold, M. Busch, H. Klein, H. Liebermann, U. Ratzinger
    IAP, Frankfurt University
 
 The Crossbar-H-mode (CH)-structure which has been developed at the IAP in Frankfurt is a multi-cell drift tube structure for the efficient acceleration of low and medium energy protons and ions [1, 2]. A superconducting CHcavity with 19 cells (f=360 MHz, beta=0.1) has been built and tested successfully (see fig. 1) [2, 3]. After the localization of a field emission site an additional surface treatment has been performed. Recent tests showed a significant increase in performance. A gradient of 7 MV/m in cw operation has been reached, corresponding to an effective voltage gain of 5.6 MV in that cavity. This shows that high real estate gradients can be achieved in superconducting low energy mulit-cell cavities. Several projects like IFMIF or EUROTRANS/ ADS with fixed velocity profile driver linacs could profit from this development. 
slides iconSlides(PDF) 
WEP54A tuner for a superconducting CH-prototype cavity618
 
  • A. Bechtold, M. Busch, H. Liebermann, H. Podlech, U. Ratzinger
    IAP, J.  W.  Goethe-Universitaet
 
 The superconducting CH multi-cell prototype cavity will be equipped with a frequency tuning system. The rftuning during operation bases on the principle of a slight elastic deformation at both ends of the tank. This is causing a change in the gap width of the first and last accelerating cell and the accompanying variation of capacity finally results in a frequency shift. The effects on rf-frequency and field distribution have been measured and were compared with previous calculations. The tuning system implies two stages, a slow mechanical device and a fast piezo system, all parts were manufactured already. Additionally, the mechanical resonances of the cavity have been investigated experimentally in the environment of an acoustical laboratory at room temperature and recently within the vertical cryostat at 4 K. Moreover, an active periodic cavity detuning provided by the piezo tuners was implied, while stable superconducting cavity operation was kept by a frequency control loop acting on the rf-frequency oscillator.