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Injection and Extraction intoout of Accelerators

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some beam loss on the septum cannot be prevented; ... the front septum has very high current density and major heating problems ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Injection and Extraction intoout of Accelerators


1
Injection and Extraction into/out of Accelerators
  • Neil Marks,
  • ASTeC, U. of Liverpool.
  • Daresbury Laboratory,
  • Warrington WA4 4AD,
  • U.K.
  • Tel (44) (0)1925 603191
  • Fax (44) (0)1925 603192

2
The Injection/Extraction problem.
  • Single turn injection/extraction
  • a magnetic element inflects beam into the ring
    and turn-off before the beam completes the first
    turn (extraction is the reverse).
  • Multi-turn injection/extraction
  • the system must inflect the beam into
  • the ring with an existing beam circulating
  • without producing excessive disturbance
  • or loss to the circulating beam.
  • Accumulation in a storage ring
  • A special case of multi-turn injection -
    continues over many turns
  • (with the aim of minimal disturbance to the
    stored beam).

straight section
magnetic element
injected beam
3
Single turn simple solution
  • A kicker magnet with fast turn-off (injection)
    or turn-on (extraction) can be used for single
    turn injection.

B
t
injection fast fall
extraction fast rise
Problems i) rise or fall will always be non-zero
? loss of beam ii) single turn inject does not
allow the accumulation of high current iii) in
small accelerators revolution times can be ltlt 1
ms. iv) magnets are inductive ? fast rise (fall)
means (very) high voltage.
4
Multi-turn injection solutions
  • Beam can be injected by phase-space manipulation
  • a) Inject into an unoccupied outer region of
    phase space with non-integer tune which ensures
    many turns before the injected beam re-occupies
    the same region (electrons and protons)
  • eg Horizontal phase space at Q ¼ integer

septum
0 field deflect. field
turn 2
turn 3
turn 1 first injection
turn 4 last injection
5
Multi-turn injection solutions
  • b) Inject into outer region of phase space -
    damping coalesces beam into the central region
    before re-injecting (leptons only)

c) inject negative ions through a bending magnet
and then strip to produce a p after injection
(H- to p only).
6
Multi-turn extraction solution
  • Shave particles from edge of beam into an
    extraction channel whilst the beam is moved
    across the aperture

septum
  • Points
  • some beam loss on the septum cannot be prevented
  • efficiency can be improved by blowing up on
    1/3rd or 1/4th integer resonance.

7
Magnet for injection and extraction (i).
  • i) Kicker magnets needed to deflect the
    circulating beam for a very short time (a small
    number of turns) they need
  • pulsed waveform
  • rapid rise or fall times (usually ltlt 1 ms)
  • flat-top for uniform beam deflection.
  • Usually achieved with a
  • window frame design

8
A typical kicker magnet (EMMA)
Because of the high frequency waveform, the
magnet yoke is assembled from high frequency
ferrite. Work performed by Kiril Marinov (ASTeC)
9
Magnet for injection and extraction (ii).
  • Septum magnets needed to deflect (strongly) the
    injected or extracted beam without deflecting the
    circulating beam.
  • pulsed or d.c. waveform
  • spatial separation into two regions
  • one region of high field (for injection
    deflection)
  • one region of very low (ideally 0) field for
    existing beam
  • septum to be as
  • thin
  • as possible to
  • limit beam loss.

10

Septum Magnets classic design.

Often (not always) located inside the vacuum and
used to deflect part of the beam for injection or
extraction
  • The thin 'septum' coil on the front face gives
  • high field within the gap,
  • low field externally
  • Problems
  • The thickness of the septum must be minimised to
    limit beam loss
  • the front septum has very high current density
    and major heating problems

11

Septum Magnet eddy current design.
  • uses a pulsed current through a backleg coil
    (usually a poor design feature) to generate the
    field
  • the front eddy current shield must be, at the
    septum, a number of skin depths thick elsewhere
    at least ten skin depths
  • high eddy currents are induced in the front
    screen but this is at earth potential and bonded
    to the base plate heat is conducted out to the
    base plate
  • field outside the septum are usually 1 of
    field in the gap.

12
A modern septum design (EMMA)
Work performed by Kiril Marinov (ASTeC)
13

Comparison of the two types.

Classical Eddy current Excitation d.c or
low frequency pulse pulse at gt 10
kHz Coil single turn including single or
multi-turn on front septum backleg, room
for large cross section Cooling complex-
water spirals heat generated in in thermal
contact with shield is conducted to
septum base plate Yoke conventional
steel high frequency material (ferrite
or radio metal).
14
Kicker power supplies - distributed

Standard (CERN) delay line magnet and power
supply
? Power Supply ? Thyratron? Magnet
?Resistor The power supply and interconnecting
cables are matched to the surge impedance of the
delay line magnet
15

Kicker Power supplies lumped.
  • The magnet is (mainly) inductive - no added
    distributed capacitance
  • the magnet must be very close to the supply
    (minimises inductance).

I (V/R) (1 exp (- R t /L)
i.e. the same waveform as distributed power
supply, lumped magnet systems..
16

Improvement on above


The extra capacitor C improves the pulse
substantially.
17
Resulting Waveform

Example calculated for the following parameters
mag inductance L 1 mH rise time t 0.2
ms resistor R 10 W trim capacitor C
4,000 pF. The impedance in the lumped circuit is
twice that needed in the distributed! The voltage
to produce a given peak current is the same in
both cases.
Performance at t 0.1 ms, current amplitude
0.777 of peak at t 0.2 ms, current
amplitude 1.01 of peak. The maximum
overswing is 2.5. This is much simpler and
cheaper than the distributed systems.
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