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Upgrade Plans for the Advanced Photon Source (APS)

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Title: Upgrade Plans for the Advanced Photon Source (APS)


1
Upgrade Plans for the Advanced Photon Source
(APS)
  • A presentation made at Brookhaven National
    Labroatory
  • October 29th, 2007
  • J. Murray Gibson
  • Associate Laboratory Director for Scientific User
    Facilities, Argonne National Laboratory
  • Director, Advanced Photon Source

2
APS scientific impact continues to grow
Refereed publications
56 of journal papers hadimpact factor gt 3.5
(2006)
Unique Users
3411 unique users in 2007
3
APS science today
Understanding malaria resistance, Baxter et. al.
PNAS, 104, (2007)
Fighting AIDS with Kaletra
The nanostructure of cement Allen et. al. Nat.
Mat. (2007)
Nanocrystalline ferrihydrite - wastewater
filter? Michel et. al. Science 316, 1726 (2007).
Caged metal ions in solution Wilsaon et. al.
Inorg. Chem, 46, (2007).
Better thermal barrier coatings, Chiritescu et
al., Science 315, 351 (2007)
Dislocation walls are lumpy Levine et. al. Nat.
Mat (2006)
4
APS science today
How does radiation kill? Daly et. al., PLoS Biol.
5 (2007).
Preventingmass As poisoning
Cu angiogenesis, Finney et. al. PNAS, 104, 2247
(2007).
Understandingthe core-mantleboundary
New H2O2 alloy at high P-T Mao et
al., Science 314, 636 (2006).
Atomic level vision improves permanent
magnetsHaskel et. al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 95,
(2005)
5
APS science today
Individual atomic steps on orthoclase Fenter et.
al. Nat. Phys. 2, 700 (2006).
Dynamics of antiferromagnetic domain walls -
Shpyrko et. al. Nature 447, 68 (2007)
Stressed-out gels, Chung.et. al. Phys. Rev. Lett.
96 (2006)
Osteoporosis, Stock et. al.
Fluid sprays, Wang et. al. Appl. Phys. Lett. 89.
(2006)
Magnetic Instability Regions in Patterned
Structures, Han et. al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 98
(2007)
Big Bugs, Socha et. al. Science, (2007)
6
APS science tomorrow
New PX beamlineswith micro-focusing
Ultrafaststudies
7
APS science beyond tomorrow
new beamlines
Dedicated beamlinesDetectors, softwareand
instrumentation
Would revolutionize imaging/coherenceapps and
focusing for spectroscopy, diffraction Expands
time-resolved research
and an upgraded ERL machine design
8
Creating more dedicated beamlines - mission from
2003
2003
2009
Tailored insertion devices 03 compared with 09
(plan)
9
New Intermediate energy x-ray beamline (funded)
APS is a superb source of intermediate energy
x-rays
APPLE-II 100 mA 7 GeV 2.4 m device
High-energy angle-resolved photoemission Resonant
elastic scattering Proposal made by P. Abbamonte
(U. Illinois), J.C.Campuzano (U. Illinois) and
J. Allen (U. Michigan) Funded as a CDT
(Coolabroative Development Team)jointly by NSF,
DOE
10
Physics in High Fields -gt A high DC field (35T)
beamline (proposed)
More powerful magnets would enable new types of
experiments Normal SC magnets limited to 17T
Higher fields require hybrid magnets
New Magnet Technology
Existing Magnets
Ferromagnetism Magneto-calorics Magneto-electrics
Metamagnetism
Charge,Orbital, Structure in Oxides
Frustrated magnets, molecular magnets
Heavy Fermions
Normal State in high-Tc
Vortex Physics
30
10
0
20
40
Academy endorsed..
Magnetic Field (Tesla)
11
Next generation light sources offer revolutionary
performance
  • Ultra-high coherence (up to 1000 x better than
    todays 3rd gen sources)
  • Ultra-short pulses (up to 10,000 times shorter
    than todays 3rd gen sources)
  • Together with higher signal (photons per pulse,
    and/or per unit solid angle and bandwidth
    (BRILLIANCE))
  • In this talk I will focus on the energy-recovery
    LINAC (ERL) concept, a source which will provide
    essentially complete spatial coherence
  • This is ideally suited for imaging, probe forming
    and speckle applications
  • Areas which are growing rapidly today at 3rd gen
    sources
  • The ERL also can produce very short pulses for
    special applications, but the primary
    revolutionary source of short pulses will be the
  • X-ray laser
  • e.g. LCLS, XFEL, JASRI

12
What is the fourth generation revolution in x-ray
sources?
Storage ring
Energy-RecoveryLINAC
LINAC source(gt FEL)
  • Extremely high peak brilliance
  • Full spatial coherence
  • Ultrashort pulses
  • Temporal coherence with seeding in future
  • Relatively low pulse rep rate
  • Fewer users
  • High average brilliance
  • Full spatial coherence
  • Many users
  • Ready tunability
  • High flux
  • Short pulses but closely spaced and lower of
    photons per pulse
  • Many users
  • Ready tunability
  • High flux
  • Low brilliance
  • Long pulses

13
Imaging and the energy-recovery LINAC
110 years
  • Imaging is back at the forefront of x-ray
    science!
  • Next generation sources offer full coherence
    which will revolutionize x-ray imaging and
    related coherent applications
  • What is happening in x-ray imaging today at APS
    and elsewhere?
  • New ERL sources and upgrades to storage rings
    being considered

14
Frontier tools different regimes of full-field
x-ray imaging
near-fieldFresnel
far-field Fraunhofer
2a
X-ray beam
z a2/l
z gtgt a2/l
absorptionradiograph
phasecontrast
in-line holography
coherent diffraction
Miao et al. Nature (1999).
Jacobsen (2003).
Kagoshima et al. JJAP (1999).
15
Full-field imaging Biomechanics and animal
physiology
pure diffusion
very small critter
?
insect
pure convection
human
Field museum of Chicago APS, Argonne National
Lab.
16
Coherent X-Ray Diffraction Imaging
? Coherent diffraction imaging is much like
crystallography but applied to noncrystalline
materials
? First proposed by David Sayre in 1980, and
first experimental demonstration by John Miao et
al in 1999 using soft x-rays
? Requires a fully coherent x-ray beam
17
High-speed imaging of fuel and liquid sprays
Y. J. Wang, Kyoung-Su Im, K. Fezzaa, W. K. Lee,
J. Wang, P. Micheli, and C. Laub, Quantitative
x-ray phase-contrast imaging of air-assisted
water sprays with high Weber numbers, Appl.
Phys. Lett. 89, 151913 (9 October 2006).
Left Three-dimensional rendering of the
air-assisted coaxial spray in the near-nozzle
region of an industrial paint spray gun (Illinois
Tool Works, Inc.) with an air pressure of
137kPa.  The false color intensity represents the
liquid volume fraction, which was quantified for
the first time with the x-ray phase-contrast
imaging.  (Courtesy of Francesco De Carlo of the
APS.)
paint spray gun
fuel spray in engines
X-ray flash imaging at 300ns !!
18
STXM example - Defect engineering for
less-costly solar cells
T. Buonassisi et al. Nature Materials August 14
(2005)
quench only LD8mm
quench re-anneal LD18mm
Frequency
slow cool LD25mm
Diffusion Length µm
µ-XRF
Multicrystalline mc-Si
  • Metal impurities in mc-Si
  • Device performance?
  • Defect engineering?

19
X-Ray fluorescence imaging of single bacterial
cells
Kemner et al. Science 306, 686 (2004).
m-XANES
  • Redox states Cr(III)

A planktonic bacterium cell before exposure to
Cr B planktonic cell after exposure to 1000 ppm
Cr(VI) Isolated planktonic cell accumulates Cr,
looses typical cellular elements, and stains
dead Surface adhered cell does not take up Cr,
shows no change in elemental content, and remains
alive
Attachment of prokaryotic cells to surfaces
modulates elemental content and response to
environmental challenges
20
An ERL would produce almost fully-coherent
illumination (transversely) gt probing complex
materials dynamics by x-ray photon correlation
spectroscopy (XPCS)
  • e.g. Photon correlation spectroscopy becomes 4
    orders of magnitude faster ?

Glassy dynamics
Dynamics of membranes
Better detectors will reach sub-ms
21
High Pressure Materials, Engineering, Geological
and Space Sciences. J. B. Parise, H.- K. Mao,
and R. Hemley at Cornell ERL Workshop (2000)
  • HP experiments are brightness-limited. Time
    resolved experiments for plasticity, rheology
    measurements, phase transitions, etc. are
    especially photon starved.
  • Higher P ? smaller samples.
  • No ideal pressurization medium ? need to scan
    sample.
  • Peak-to-background critical.
  • ERL will greatly extend pressures and samples
    that can be studied.

Parise, Hemley Mao
22
X-rays complementary to other imaging techniques.
  • X-ray sources better suited for studying large
    volume samples and doing some averaging
    (scattering cross section is low relative to
    electrons, radiation damage is comparable)
  • Precision measurements of structure, lattice
    spacing and strain, magnetization..
  • Higher spectroscopic sensitivity to low
    concentration
  • Or, in-situ experiments where penetration is
    needed

Transmission Electron Microscopy
23
Multiple timescales in chemical processes
Solvent relaxation
Vibrational relaxation
G. R. Fleming Chemical Applications of Ultrafast
Spectroscopy 1986
Electronic relaxation
Energy transfer in photosynthesis
Molecular rotation
Electron transfer in photosynthesis
Vibrational motion
Torsional dynamics of DNA
Photodissociation
Electronic dephasing
Proton transfer
Protein internal motion
Photoionization
Photochemical Isomerization
Time
10-15
10-14
10-13
10-12
10-11
10-10
10-9
10-8
10-7
10-6
10-5
10-16 sec
Lasers
ERL
Synchrotron X-ray
Synchrotron X-ray
XFEL
24
Short pulses at APS a step towards the future
A million photons in a trillionth of a second at
sector 7 in 2009
25
Fast dynamics FeRh lattice-expansion phase
transition
Motivation Explore correlated magnetic and
structural phase transitions in a material
of technological interest
  • Ultrafast laser induces magnetic phase
    transition (500 fs) and anomalous lattice
    expansion
  • Present measurements on homogeneous thin films
  • Material may have applications in laser assisted
    recording


heat spot
D. Walko et al.
26
Ultrafast What do we want?
High repetition rate of ERL lends itself to
structural studies of the linear response of
systems to a perturbation.
Physics Physics
Linear Non-linear
Pump weak, high rep rate strong, slow rep rate
Probe weak weak
27
Elementary Excitations
Want to measure the structure of a single exciton
in a single-walled carbon nanotube
28
An ERL has been recently considered as a viable
upgrade path for APS
  • We are examining options for a major APS upgrade
    in the next decade
  • The ERL looks very promising, and has been
    considered along with storage ring enhancements,
    FELs and other possibilities
  • Proposed and developed by Cornell
  • Natural upgrade path for storage ring such as APS
  • Can be done without compromise or major
    disruption
  • Much RD is needed for the ERL, and we plan to
    partner on research and development in next few
    years

29
Status of Facilities for the Future 20-Year
Outlook By the End of FY 2008
Ray Orbach 9/21 update to BESAC
Technology readiness changed Changed due to
planned facility abroad
30
Controlling Matter and Energy Five Challenges
for Science and the Imagination
Ongoing BESAC study
Ray Orbach charges groupto develop plan for 21st
Centurylight sources in this context (08)
  • Graham Fleming and Mark Ratner
  • September 20, 2007

Please note This material has not yet been
reviewed or approved by BESAC.
31
Cornell DC Gun BNL AES SRF Gun
RD for x-ray source ERLs going on worldwide
several years RD on superconducting RF for LINAC
design needed ERL construction and
commissioning could be possible as gun
development continues (Gun is challenging) APS is
beginning to participate in ERL RD
32
Questions to be addressed by ERL Beam Dynamics RD
  • How can the required ultra-low emittance be
    produced and preserved with the required bunch
    charge?
  • Design gun and merger using evolutionary
    algorithms, targeting 0.1 micron emittance, 23
    ps rms bunch length for 20 pC/bunch
  • Such performance not yet demonstrated even in
    simulation
  • Explore options for DC and rf guns, both normal
    and superconducting
  • What is the most cost-effective configuration
    that preserves emittance?
  • Develop options for single- and multi-pass linacs
    in various configurations
  • Explore alternatives to complex TBA-based designs
    that sufficiently control both coherent and
    quantum radiation effects
  • How can beam instabilities be controlled at
    25100 mA average current?
  • Apply standard codes to evaluate and improve
    lattices and cavities for resistance to beam
    break-up (BBU) instability
  • Model ion trapping and explore use of kickers to
    create bunch gaps
  • Develop integrated ELEGANT simulation that
    includes BBU, resistive wall, chamber wakes,
    detailed transport, etc.

33
ERL Beam Dynamics RD
  • What is the expected level of beam loss and how
    can it be reduced and managed?
  • Reach an understanding of beam halo generation
    and propagation, starting at the gun
  • Perform careful modeling of beam loss and
    propagation of shower products
  • Perform careful design of collimation and
    shielding
  • Do predictions of ERL performance hold up when
    integrated, start-to-end simulations are
    performed with errors and other practical issues
    included?
  • Develop methods for dealing with multiple, long,
    independently-controlled insertion devices
    combined with a very small beam emittance
  • Develop and model lattice correction techniques
    that succeed at a level comparable to 3rd
    generation light sources
  • Develop path length adjustment methods to
    maintain efficient energy recovery in the face of
    seasonal, tidal, and user-related changes.

34
Proposed ERL Test Facility
  • APS supports building a 25 mA, 200 MeV ERL test
    facility
  • Test predictions related to beam quality and its
    preservation up to relativistic energies
  • Assess performance and reliability of rf
    cavities, dampers, and control systems in a
    realistic high-current environment
  • Investigate beam loss and collimation in an
    experimental setting
  • Develop high-precision, high-rate diagnostics
  • Address integration issues
  • We are eager to be the host or a strong partner
    in this endeavor

35
Improving Cavity Quality Factor Q0
  • Light source ERLs require continuous wave (CW) rf
    power.
  • Current state-of-the-art processing techniques
    can consistently produce Q0 1?1010 for
    multi-cell cavities operating at an accelerating
    field gradient of 18 MV/m at 2.0K.
  • The wall-plug power for high beam current
    ERL-based light sources with a Q01?1010, is on
    the order of tens of megawatts.
  • Improving niobium cavity quality factor, Q0, by
    at least a factor of two, will substantially
    reduce the overall wall-plug power consumption
  • Our goal is to conduct RD to improve cavity
    quality factor by a factor of five, Q05?1010.
  • Improving surface residual resistance ( our
    goal is to obtain 1n?).
  • Exploring niobium cavity surface coating using
    atomic layer deposition (ALD)
  • Investigating other materials ( e.g., Nb3Sn)

36
Multi-cell Cavity and Cryomodule Design for CW
Operation
  • Optimizing a multi-cell cavity shape to achieve
    good accelerating gradient with high rf
    efficiency.
  • Optimizing a multi-cell cavity to reduce trapped
    higher-order-modes (HOMs) inside the cavity and
    to efficiently extract and absorb HOM power.
  • Designing cost-effective HOM power absorbers.
  • Investigate the design of an optimized and
    magnetically-shielded cw cryomodule to reduce the
    effect of microphonics and to maintain the
    cavities high Q values.
  • Investigate the design of an adjustable
    fundamental power coupler with power handling
    capability of 100 to 150 kW (cw) for 1300- to
    1500 MHz operation.

Concept of a 5-cell SRF cavity optimized for
high-current and good rf efficiency for CW
operation.
Ampere-class cryomodule concept.
37
Cathode Development for ERL Injector
  • Challenge
  • ERL requires electron source with an order of
    magnitude smaller emittance than that achieved in
    present injectors
  • Emittance requirement is on the order of the
    intrinsic emittance of a photocathode, which sets
    the lower limit of the achievable emittance
  • Critical physics near the cathode surface related
    to intrinsic emittance is poorly understood
  • Approach
  • Perform optimization study of laser-photocathode
    system to set boundaries on min. QE and max.
    intrinsic emittance
  • Systematically characterize the intrinsic
    emittance for a variety of cathodes using
    advanced surface analysis to measure the emission
    momentum distribution (ARPES) and
    spatially-resolved cathode composition and
    surface geometry (e.g., SEM, scanning Auger)
  • Benchmark improved physics models based on these
    data in a test injector
  • Complementary RD
  • Develop and test optimized gun designs for
    physics regime of ERL injector

38
Cavity Laser could become Possible with ERL Beam
Fully coherent (temporal and spatial) source!
Revolutionary idea
39
Upgrade Planning
  • We have submitted an RD proposal to the DOE.
  • We plan to hold a retreat next summer
    (Strategic Planning Meeting on the APS Upgrade)
  • DOEs BESAC advisory committee will hold a
    workshop to address science-driven needs for new
    facilities, which is the next key step in their
    planning process.

ANL/APS efforts will be supported by ANL Lab
Funds in FY 2008
  • New ERL accelerator RD funding
  • New science funding
  • Imaging and ultrafast science
  • Additional detector development
  • (total about 4M per years)

40
Summary
  • APS Upgrade is timely and is encouraged by
    stakeholders.
  • Choice and timing remain uncertain.
  • Office of Science is committed to flourishing of
    photon sciences in the US, and APS is
    well-poised ot plan an upgrade
  • We advocate the Energy Recovery LINAC.
  • Revolutionary properties
  • Imaging (focusing, coherence)
  • Ultrafast science
  • Ties in to ANL/Chicago imaging strengths.
  • RD on accelerator and science is our short-term
    priority.
  • We hope to be well positioned to bid for a
    project in 2-3 years.

41
Extras
42
On-axis Brilliance Tuning Curves for Current APS
Lattice vs. ERL High-coherence Mode vs. LCLS vs.
NSLS II
  • Beam energy 7.0 GeV (APS), 4.3 13.6 GeV
    (LCLS), 3.0 GeV (NSLS II)
  • Beam current 100 mA (APS), 25 mA (ERL High
    Coherence HC), 500 mA (NSLS II)

43
Cutting the cost of construction and operation
through multi-pass options
44
Multipass options?
and smaller
45
a dozen new 3rd generation sources opening this
decade
The World is Changing and New Tools are Available
Worlds firstX-ray FEL atSLAC
New 3rd gen sourceat Brookhaven
ESRF planning majorupgrade
ERL and FEL being developed in Japan
46
Phase contrast imaging hits Times Square last
week
47
Grand challenges identified by CMMP report
  • How do complex phenomena emerge from simple
    ingredients?
  • How will energy demands of future generations be
    met?
  • What is the physics of life?
  • What happens far from equilibrium and why?
  • What new discoveries await us in the nanoworld?
  • How will the information technology revolution be
    extended?
  • all were addressed in my examples

The report identified tremendous opportunities
from new lights sources to address these grand
challenges, specifically seeded-FELs and ERLs,
but also recognized major RD challenges which
must be addressed
BESAC is also addressing grand challenges in
basic energy sciences
48
Imaging has Progressed Far in 110 Years
  • ERL revolutionizes imaging (as good as it
    gets).
  • Proposal was submitted to the State of Illinois
    for an Imaging Institute.
  • Argonne has proposed to DOE the Argonne
    Scattering and Imaging Institute.
  • Couples to advanced computing, microscopy and
    nanosciences at ANL.
  • Couples well to partner activities
  • e.g., Chicago, Northwestern, UIC Biomedicine

Electron microscopeimaging at ANL
49
The majority of our users are from academia
and a significant fraction of their research
support comes from NSF
50
And the ERL would Revolutionize Ultra-Fast Studies
  • Will allow studies of nanoscale dynamics to be
    performed 10,000 times faster.
  • Will access the time scale of a picosecond and
    belowfor ultrafast science (fast-track ps pulses
    at Sector 7).
  • Will complement FELs, better-suited for linear
    phenomena.

FeRh
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