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ILC Operation

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3) collimation. Klystrons (depending on power saving strategies) ... Will the pilot bunch go through the energy collimation? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ILC Operation


1
ILC Operation SLAC ILC Controls meeting,
1/19/2006
  • Turning on the beam
  • The chronology of a trip
  • Separating power and luminosity
  • testing feedbacks
  • Maintaining equilibrium through transients
  • Positrons

2
At first
  • Extract the 1 pilot from the DR
  • 10 us later begin the full train sequence
  • Each bunch must traverse properly or the abort
    system will be triggered.
  • sensed using the
  • beam position monitors,
  • beam loss monitors and
  • beam intensity monitors
  • true single bunch response time devices.

3
Damping Ring
  • Before extraction must have
  • no coherent motion
  • decent lifetime
  • appropriate gaps
  • designated pilot bunch ready to be first
  • tested kicker pulse in the gap
  • RF within tols

4
Abort systems rtml, linac/undu, bds
  • The minimal abort system consists of a spoiler /
    collimator / absorber block (copper) and a
    kicker.
  • Rise time should be fast enough to produce a
    guaranteed displacement of more than the pipe
    radius in an inter-bunch interval. In any given
    fault, at most 450 bunches would then strike the
    copper block.
  • Assuming the latency for detecting the fault is
    500 ns, the upstream signal effective propagation
    speed is 0.7 c, and the abort kicker latency time
    is 1 us, the maximum kicker spacing should be
    1000m.

5
MPS abort dumps
  • In the baseline configuration five abort systems
    are needed on the electron side (four on the e
    side) 2 upstream of the linac, one upstream of
    the undulator and 2 in the beam delivery.
  • An alternative is an additional abort per
    kilometer of linac.
  • may depend on the linac straightness.
  • The required kicker deflection is 10 mm, for the
    radius, and a relatively small additional amount
    for margin. With a kicker volume of 20 20 mm,
    about 25 MW of peak power would be required for a
    50 m long kicker system

6
Linac failure modes and time scales
  • Quads,
  • RF phase and amplitude during the pulse
  • Cryo slow
  • valves slow
  • dipoles
  • fast time scale energy drop

7
Energy / Energy spread stabilization
  • Nominal plan end of linac monitoring system
  • Backup plan use residual beta oscillation
    wavelength
  • May need additional BPMs (HOM?)
  • Chirp bunch train a small amount
  • High resolution BPMs needed
  • To avoid ? mid-linac spectrometers.
  • These are justified when the linac will be
    operated with narrow energy bandpass (not this
    linac)
  • expected bandpass 50, depending on
    straightness?
  • expect undulator to be narrow - band

8
Collimation
  • 10KW/m max with very optimistic halo
    assumptions
  • About 10x SLC max
  • Mechanical tests, tolerances
  • energy collimation likely to demand most care
  • narrower than BDS optical bandwidth (0.2?)
  • energy variations on the slits
  • intra-train feedback
  • fast local abort

9
Expected energy variability
  • LLRF LO
  • Seen at TTF (250kHz)
  • Mixing intermodulation 1300 / 52 MHz ?
  • Interbunch spacing 400/1300 (16/52) us
  • Should be ok.
  • Check for intermodulation with digitizer clock
    high harmonic relationship
  • slow quenches outside of feedback correction
    range
  • the loss in gradient cannot be compensated by
    single klystron vector sum feedback
  • often seen at TTF

10
MPS average power loss
  • For stability, it is important to keep as much of
    the machine operating at a nominal power level.
  • including the source, damping ring injector and
    the damping ring itself.
  • Segmentation is the key ? beam shut off points.
  • Each of these segmentation points is capable of
    handling the full beam power, i.e. both a kicker
    and dump are required.
  • also fast abort locations

11
Begin End
1 e- injector Source (gun) e- Damping ring injection (before)
2 e- damping ring Ring injection e- Ring extraction (after)
3 e- RTML Ring extraction e- Linac injection (before)
4 e- linac Linac injection Undulator (before)
5 Undulator Undulator BD e target
6 e- BDS BD start e- Main dump
7 e target e target e damping ring injection
8 e damping ring Ring injection e ring extraction
9 e RTML ring extraction e linac injection
10 e linac linac injection e BDS
11 e BDS e BDS e main dump
12
Low Power operation
  • intra-train b/b feedback limitations
  • Pilot bunch one nominal I bunch?
  • What is the minimum beam power for nominal
    operation?
  • beam-sensor performance degradation
  • LLRF/BPM systematics
  • Collimation esp. energy. Does the pilot bunch go
    through the slits?
  • Reduced repetition rate
  • 0.1 Hz pulse rate
  • 10 KHz bunch spacing
  • Reduced RF power operation

13
Example low power operationpilot 1 _at_ 1Hz
  • 800W / 11.3 MW ? factor 15000 reduction
  • Compelling to test lumi/background/tuning
    procedures
  • How many bunches at what intensity / spacing are
    needed for systems that MUST have intra-train
    feedback?
  • Pilot 1 at 10 us?
  • Laserwire scan will take 1 minute x y
    coupling phase space 15m unless scans can be done
    in parallel, at both ends of the machine, for
    example.
  • Can electricity use be reduced?
  • Marx allows controllable pulse length
  • Baseline?
  • Klystron thermal stabilization ? another
    transient for LLRF to handle

14
Equilibrium
  • Where are the fields that depend on preceding
    beam pulses?
  • There are (at least) 3 primary subsystems whose
    configuration depends on average beam power
  • 1) damping ring alignment,
  • 2) positron capture system phases,
  • 3) collimation
  • Klystrons (depending on power saving
    strategies)
  • In each of these cases, beam heating is a
    significant part of the total heat flow and will
    necessarily have some impact.
  • At SLC, the beam power on target was 30KW, about
    20 of this was absorbed in the positron capture
    RF section.
  • Much can be done to reduce these effects using
    more careful initial engineering,
  • beam power is much more than 30KW neutral beam
    may mitigate this
  • Must consider the impact of residual temperature
    changes carefully and assume they will be a
    problem.

15
Damping ring stored current
  • How to keep the DR full under all variations
    downstream upstream?
  • Lifetime?
  • Off-axis injection (aka accumulation)?
  • Abort fill cycles low repetition rate
  • most ring users recommend top up for
    maintaining equilibrium
  • Full power dumps are needed in the damping ring
    (complex) and at the entrance to the linac.
  • to keep the DRs as warm as possible.

16
Tune up and steady-state dumps
  • 1) purpose for additional high power dumps
    results from the desire to keep upstream systems
    in equilibrium during short interruptions.
  • Other functions include the desire to have beam
    instrumentation and related feedback /
    stabilization systems in operation during the
    interruptions
  • (soft requirements in comparison).
  • The critical parameters are the degree to which
    the upstream machine configuration (includes
    field strength, phase, alignment etc) depend on
    the average beam power in those locations.
  • If it is guaranteed that there is no difference
    between full power operation and very low power
    operation, then additional high power dumps are
    not needed.

17
MPS Transients
  • two basic kinds of interruptions,
  • 1) short (MPS or beam tuning) driven where it
    would be useful if the system recovered more or
    less instantly and
  • 2)longer interruptions involving access etc where
    upstream thermal time scales are unimportant.
  • High power beam auxiliary beam dumps are only
    needed for 1) (not 2).
  • The most logical place to dump the full rep
    rate/n_bunch beam is before the entrance to the
    linac, not after it.
  • recommend removing the baseline requirement for
    full power dumps at the entrance to the beam
    delivery.
  • These dumps are important but need not take full
    power, only the full bunch train. A much lower
    power, lower cost dump could be implemented, for
    example one capable of 0.1Hz full train
    operation.
  • expect that 0.5MW dumps will be much cheaper and
    easier to deal with than full power beam dumps.
  • full power dump will cost 50M (DESY).
  • Lower power dumps may cost 1/10 of this, based on
    the SLC design.

18
Full power Dumps
  • The undulator positron system should also remain
    operating at full power. This requires a full
    power charged beam dump at that location. In
    principle, if there were a problem on the
    positron side, the electron beam could be
    transported to the main BDS dumps.
  • 6) During access to the BDS area, where the
    interruption is long compared to these thermal
    time scales, the power in the entire machine,
    except the stored beam in the DR, should be
    scaled back to reasonable levels.
  • 7) This is the 'minimum dump' configuration.
    There are 6 1/2 MW class dumps, one 15 MW (at the
    e source) and 2 nominal full power 20MW dumps.
    Not including dumps needed in the injector,
    undamped, system.
  • Positron capture

19
Operation with the keep-alive
  • ring population
  • both rings full
  • full e- ring / one e
  • full e / one e- (?)
  • both rings one (or small)
  • accumulation (aka off-axis injection) from the
    keep-alive
  • full ring fill takes 30,000 10 bunches (100
    min _at_ single bunch)
  • lifetime 10 minutes

20
Pilot control
  • Will the pilot bunch go through the energy
    collimation?
  • Coupling vs intensity two different ways to
    make a pilot bunch.

21
Kicker operation
  • Feedback
  • stabilizing the voltage
  • stabilizing the residual kick
  • Feedforward
  • across the extraction hairpin
  • Single point failures

22
Single point failures
  • critical, high power, high speed devices
  • damping ring kicker,
  • DRRF,
  • linac front end RF,
  • bunch compressor RF and
  • dump magnets systems
  • redundancy needed.
  • extraction kicker, a sequence of independent
    power supplies and stripline magnets that have
    minimal common mode failure mechanisms.
  • front end and bunch compressor RF, more than one
    klystron / modulator system powering a given
    cavity through a tee.
  • LLRF feedback must stabilize the RF in the event
    that one of sources fails mid-pulse.
  • alternate using a sequence of modestly powered
    devices controlled completely in parallel,
  • There are several serious common mode failures in
    the timing and phase distribution system that
    need specially engineered controls.
  • frozen unless the system is in the benign beam
    tune up mode.

23
Control limits
  • Depending on the state of the machine, ?
  • programmed (perhaps at a very low level) ramp
    rate limits that keep critical components from
    changing too quickly.
  • may have an impact on the speed of beam based
    feedback.
  • Some devices, such as collimators should be
    effectively frozen in position at the highest
    beam power level.
  • There may be several different modes, basically
    defined by beam power, that indicate different
    ramp rate limits.

24
The Baseline Machine (500GeV)
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