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J' Jacob 1

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Harmonic Cavities:the Pros & Cons. J rn Jacob ... [J. Byrd et al.] fRF = 500 MHz. Beam Instability Workshop, ESRF, 13th - 15th March 2000 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: J' Jacob 1


1
Harmonic Cavitiesthe Pros Cons Jörn Jacob
2
Content
  • Main motivation for harmonic cavities tTouschek
  • Harmonic cavities on existing light sources /
    achievements, problems
  • NC passive cavities
  • NC active cavities
  • Projects for SC harmonic cavities
  • Harmonic cavities for the ESRF ?
  • Pros Cons
  • Conclusions

3
Motivation for harmonic cavities
4
Harmonic Cavities for bunch lengthening
  • Cavity at fharmn fRF (often n3)
  • Passive / active
  • Normal/Super-conducting (NC/SC)
  • Maximum bunchlength for
  • Vharm Vopt
  • fharm fopt

5
sLo 4.8 mm
(ESRF parameters)
fs
U0/e
Synchrotron frequency distribution (fs0 2 kHz)
Vharm/Vopt 0
6
Vharm/Vopt 0.25
7
Vharm/Vopt 0.5
8
Vharm/Vopt 0.6
9
Vharm/Vopt 0.7
10
Vharm/Vopt 0.8
11
Vharm/Vopt 0.9
12
Vharm/Vopt 1
A. Hofmann S. Myers
13
Vharm/Vopt 1.05
Over stretching gt formation of two bunches
14
maximum
typically
15
NC passive harmonic cavities
  • The beam drives Vharm
  • gt multibunch operation (Ibeam gt Iminimum)
  • gt Vharm controlled by Cavity tuning (typ.
    fharm? n fRF f0 /3)
  • gt fharm fopt only possible at one current

16
NC passive harmonic cavities (continued)
  • ALS Emax 1.9 GeV, Ibeam 400 mA ? 200
    mA, LFB TFB
  • 5 Cu reentrant HCs, fharm 3 fRF / 2
    tuners, HOM absorber
  • Achievements
  • ? in experiment tLife increase by factor 2.5
    (tLife 4 h ? 10 h)
  • tLength 55 ? 120 ps, fs 11.5 ? 5 kHz
  • ? LFB fs filter (now 4 kHz) limits
    DtLength-max
  • ? in operation 50 increase in tLife? 6 h (2
    cavities tuned in)
  • ? no energy spread gt detuning of HC-HOM (TM011
    at ALS)
  • Problems
  • ? Users require 20 gap in filling ? transient
    beam loading
  • ? strong beam and Voltage f modulation
  • ? less average bunch lengthening
  • ? TFB heterodyne ? homodyne receiver solved
    the problem
  • ? LFB fs modulation ? factor 6 at 3 GHz
    detection frequency
  • ? feedback saturates if Dfs gt15

fRF 500 MHz
J. Byrd et al.
17
NC passive harmonic cavities (continued)
  • BESSY II Emax 1.9 GeV, Ibeam 220 mA, LFB
    TFB
  • 4 Cu Pillbox HCs, fharm 3 fRF / 2 tuners
  • Achievements (still in commissioning)
  • ? tLife 3.2 h ? 5.2 h at 200 mA
  • ? tLength increase by factor 2.5 to 3

fRF 500 MHz
122 mA, LFB on, Vharm 0
200 mA, LFB off, Vharm 140 kV
Streak Camera same time scale, Vacc 1 MV
W. Anders et al.
18
NC passive harmonic cavities (continued)
  • BESSY II
  • ? TFB operational
  • ? LFB not yet compatible (filter bandwidth)
  • ? Phase transients with gap max 50?
  • ? HOM problems still present

W. Anders et al.
19
NC active harmonic cavities
  • NSLS VUV E 0.8 GeV
  • ? Operation alternatively in bunch lengthening
    or shortening mode
  • ? Powered cavities allow operation near Vopt ,
    fopt for any Ibeam
  • ? No Beam power

fRF 52.9 MHz, fharm 4 fRF
Latest Figures Mode Ibeam tLength tLife HC
detuned 700 mA 0.9 ns 2.5 h lengthened 700 mA 1.7
2 ns 4 h (unstable above 700 mA ? nominal 1
A) shortened 600 mA 0.48 ns 2 h (constant
length)
S. L. Kramer, N. Towne et al.
20
NC active harmonic cavities (continued)
  • NSLS VUV / Slow tuning, amplitude and phase
    feedback
  • Principle using a Complex Phasor Modulator
  • ? Voltage error signal ? real part ar regulated
    to zero by tuning
  • gt fharm -90? ( and not fopt ? -93?)
  • ? In lengthening, phase error signal from beam
    PU ? imaginary part ai
  • (at fharm ? fopt , due to flat RF
    potential? GAIN fbeam/fVcav ? -4.5)
  • ? In shortening, phase error signal from cavity
    ? imaginary part ai
  • ? System can be switched to standard tuning for
    passive operation
  • ? Stable operation in shortening mode
    difficult (high beam loading)
  • ? constant bunch length, but limited to 600 mA

ar j ai amplified and fed to the cavity
S. L. Kramer, N. Towne et al.
21
NC active harmonic cavities (continued)
  • NSLS VUV / Observed related instabilities
  • ? Lengthening mode Landau Damping of coupled
    bunch instabilities
  • ? Injection partially stretched mode gt needs
    LFB
  • ? Occurrence of non-rigid bunch instabilities in
    particular if over-stretched
  • ? chaotic appearance of broad, strong
    sidebands
  • ? beam lost if high Ibeam
  • ? For nearly optimum lengthening peak beam
    response at 1.1 fs0 to 1.4 fs0
  • ? insensitive to Ibeam, Cavity tuning
  • ? sensitive to Vharm

S. L. Kramer, N. Towne et al.
22
NC active harmonic cavities (continued)
  • NSLS VUV Stretched bunch shapes f(small
    variations of RF potential)

3 Reasons ? Shape very sensitive to fharm near
Vopt , fopt ? Gap in filling against ion
trapping ? Phase transients ? Gap in
filling ? additional revolution harmonics
? excite HOMs ? different potential
distortion for different bunches
N. Towne
23
NC active harmonic cavities (continued)
  • Super ACO E 0.8 GeV
  • Bunch shortening for FEL operation and time
    resolved experiments
  • ? Shortening by a factor up to 3.5 achieved (fs
    14 ? 40 kHz)
  • New types of instabilities observed
  • ? Vertical single bunch instability at 10
    mA/bunch no sensitivity to nz , xz , Vharm
  • ? Vertical TMCI starting at 30 mA, m0 and -1
    modes merging at 40 mA cured by high xz
    2.5 ? 4
  • ? Interference between 2 longitudinal single
    bunch oscillations
  • Low frequency sawtooth oscillations (lt 300 Hz),
    at any current
  • High frequency oscillations at mainly fs and 2
    fs , only between 2 and 8 mA/bunch
  • Bunch lengthening mode
  • ? Landau damping of LCBI
  • ? expected RobinsonII instability ?

fRF 100 MHz, fharm 5 fRF
G. Flynn et al.
M.P. Level, M. Georgsson, et al.
24
SC passive cavities
  • Elettra, SLS, ... collaboration project with
    CEA-Saclay
  • ? HOM free harmonic cavities scaling of
    352.2 MHz SOLEIL cavities
  • (pair of cavities within a single
    cryostat)
  • ? Tuning angle ? ? 90? gt Pbeam ? 0, and as
    for NSLS fharm ? 90?
  • ? Simple amplitude control by frequency tuning
    such as
  • ? Expected Bunch lengthening by a factor 4
    (Vharm lt Vopt )
  • ? Passive operation down to very low currents,
  • ? However, possible Robinson instability on m
    fs for low dfharm at low Ibeam
  • ? Phase transients also expected with SC
    cavities
  • SRRC abandon NC harmonic cavities ? required
    space, HOMs,
  • ? Feasibility study for SC harmonic
    cavities

(2 GeV) (2.4 GeV) fRF 500 MHz, fharm
1500 MHz
Vharm ? Ibeam (R/Q) fharm / dfharm
P. Marchand, M. Svandrlik, A. Mosnier et
al.
? J. Byrd
K.T. Hsu
25
Harmonic Cavity for the ESRF ?
fRF 352.2 MHz, Example fharm 3 fRF
Reason for an HC ?
  • Operation modes
  • Multibunch at 200 mA, xv 0.4 to 0.5 tLife
    60 ... 70 h gt NO
  • 16 bunch at 90 mA (5.5 mA/b) xv 0.6 tLife
    12 h gt yes
  • Single bunch at 15 mA xv 0.9 tLife 4 h
    gt yes
  • Optimistic assumption Lengthening factor 6

26
Harmonic Cavity for the ESRF ? (continued)
  • Tracking simulations? unchanged energy spread
    with HC / m-wave instability
  • More sensitive to HOM driven Longitudinal Coupled
    Bunch Instabilities

27
Harmonic cavities Pros cons Points of debate
for the subsequent working group discussions
Effects in bunch lengthening
Consequences
Pros / Cons
  • Longer bunches DtLength

? Especially low energy machines or high I/bunch
gain in Lifetime
  • Less spectral width of beam signals

? Probing less of the BBR ? Less prone to
transverse single bunch head tail instability ?

? Less HOM losses ? Reduced heating in few
bunch operation
  • RF slope ? zero Phase sensitivity

? Gap induced Phase transients NC SC (increased
by HOMs) ? Reduced gain in Lifetime
-
? TFB must be adapted
o
? LFB saturation
-
28
Harmonic cavities Pros cons, (continued)
Effects in bunch lengthening
Consequences
Pro / Con
  • Difficult to control Vopt, fopt

? limited bunch lengthening
-
? Over-stretching ? non rigid bunch instability
(NSLS)
-
  • RF slope ? zero Smaller fs

? Single bunch fast head tail (TMCI) lower
threshold ? S.Myers, Y.C. Chin, CERN
-
? LCBI lower thresholds
-
? More sensitivity to low frequency noise / power
supplies
-
  • Distorted RF potential Spread of fs

? Landau damping for LCBI, TMCI ?, transverse
instabilities with m ? 0 ?
  • More impedance (BBR, HOM)

? Bad for all kind of instabilities
-
? Robinson stability to be checked
o
29
Harmonic cavities Pros cons, (continued)
Resistive wall instability ? Smaller spectral
width ? less chromaticity needed to shift the
modes or ? Less overlap with BBR ? less damping ?

-
Operation in bunch shortening ? NSLS current
limited by slow RF feedback stability ? Super
ACO new types of instabilities ? deserve further
investigations ? No experience from low emittance
machines
30
Conclusion
  • NC passive harmonic cavities
  • ? sufficient voltage for low or medium energy
    machines /multibunch operation
  • ? tuning not easy to handle for simultaneous
    Voltage and HOM control
  • ? operate mostly below Vopt
  • ? Gain in Lifetime by typically a factor 2 to
    2.5 gt good for these machines !
  • NC active harmonic cavities
  • ? allow operation at low current (e.g. single
    bunch operation)
  • ? operation in bunch shortening demonstrated
  • SC HOM free harmonic cavities
  • ? only way for high energy machines , where
    interest is mainly for high I/bunch
  • ? no major problems with HC HOMs, Robinson,
  • ? tuning should be easier
  • ? still needs RD to check performance,
    reliability and operational costs

Transient beam loading and Beam instability
issues with Harmonic cavities ? good
candidates for extensive discussions in this
workshop
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