Beam Loss Issues of ERL Accelerators - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 21
About This Presentation
Title:

Beam Loss Issues of ERL Accelerators

Description:

Development of collimation configurations to eliminate halo particles in the ... A possible collimation scheme ... effective collimation configuration. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:41
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: aste7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Beam Loss Issues of ERL Accelerators


1
Beam Loss Issues of ERL Accelerators
  • CY Yao, L. Emery, M. borland, A. Xiao
  • Advanced Photon Source

2
Acknowledgement
  • Thanks Rod Gerig and Efim Gluskin for their many
    suggestions and support.

3
Introduction
  • Basic parameters of proposed APS ERL upgrade
  • Beam energy 7 GeV
  • Max. beam current 100 mA
  • Injector energy 10 MeV
  • Spent beam energy 10 MeV
  • Total number of SRF cavities 350
  • RF frequency 1.3 Ghz
  • Micro bunch length 2 ps
  • Beam emittance 0.022 µm-rad
  • Number of passes 2

Figure 1 Layout of Proposed APS-ERL upgrade.
4
Table1 Operation modes
Numbers scaled from G Hoffstaetters talk at 06
ERL workshop
5
Consequence of beam loss Radiation hazards
  • The APS-ERL has 1 MW of beam power of injector
    beam.
  • Although the linac is power limited, even without
    energy recovery it can still generate 2.5 MW of
    beam power.
  • A small fraction of beam loss presents a high
    radiation hazards and must be controlled.
  • Current APS safety envelope is 308 W, or beam
    loss rate of 44 nA. This is only allowed to last
    1 hour (most credible incident).
  • Argonne/DOE requires below 500 mrem/year for
    controlled area and 100 mrem/year for
    uncontrolled area.
  • Current APS beam loss during top-up operations
    21 pA. The radiation dose level is measured below
    100 mrem/year, which allows to Re-designate the
    experimental hall as uncontrolled area.
  • We need to control beam loss in APS and TAA to
    similar level. It is a challenge.

6
Consequences of beam loss equipment damage and
activation
  • Radiation from beam loss damages undulators
  • Direct beam hit can damage frond-end devices and
    vacuum chambers.
  • Heat deposit on the SRF cavities can cause
    quenching and operation downtime.
  • Radiation activates accelerator parts that may
    impact hands on maintenance. This probably is not
    a big problem for electron machine.

7
Consequence of beam loss increase both equipment
and operations cost
  • Increase the need for better shielding---high
    construction budget.
  • Increase the cooling requirement and the cost of
    the cryogenic system of SRF cavities.
  • A 10 W/cavity heat load requires 3.5 kW of
    additional cooling capacity.
  • Additional cost 35M.
  • Increase the operational power and cost of the
    cryogenic system.
  • Total heat load of 3.5 kW at 2ºK requires
    estimated of 3.5 MW of wall power.
  • Additional operation cost 1.75M/year.
  • In order to maintain this level of heat load,
    beam loss at any single point of the SRF linac
    must be lt 10 nA.

8
Beam loss mechanisms
  • Beam halo formation.
  • Gas scattering.
  • Intra-beam scattering.
  • Emittance growth
  • CSR and ISR effect
  • Wake field and other instability
  • Beam instability
  • Beam break up (BBU) in the linac.
  • Full or partial beam loss due to incidents
  • Radiation protection.
  • Machine protection.
  • Beam dump due to failure of equipment.

9
Beam Halo
  • Beam halo can be formed in many parts of the
    accelerator structure.
  • Dark current of the electron gun.
  • Stray laser light can produce dark current in a
    photo-cathode gun.
  • Space charge effect .
  • Non-linearity of lattice.
  • Field emission at the SRF cavities.
  • Mismatch of the beam transport.
  • Scattered particles that are not lost but form
    beam halo.

10
Beam halo related R D work
  • Low dark current low emittance gun development.
  • Field emission study in high gradient
    superconducting RF cavities.
  • Computer simulation of halo formation in electron
    gun and periodic focusing beam transport system.
  • Development of beam diagnostics for halo
    characterization.
  • Study halo formation process with existing APS
    linac and guns.
  • Development of collimation configurations to
    eliminate halo particles in the early stage, such
    as combination of beta function collimation.

11
Gas Scattering
  • Beam loss due to gas scattering is a concern for
    any accelerator.
  • Beam can be scattered and lost both in energy
    aperture and transverse aperture.
  • Beam energy, vacuum pressure, gas composition,
    longitudinal and transverse acceptance are the
    main factors.
  • At the APS and TAA areas the conditions for gas
    scattering are similar to current APS.
  • Gas scattering in the current APS ring is very
    small compared to intra-beam scattering.
  • We don't think gas scattering is a serious
    problem for APS-ERL.
  • R D work
  • Optimize lattice design that maximizes both
    transverse and energy acceptance in APS and TAA
    area.
  • Develop simulation tools to include the injector
    and linac.
  • Assess the effect of gas scattering on the beam
    emittance and heat load on the SRF cavities of
    linac.

12
Intra-beam Scattering
  • lntra-beam scattering is the main cause of beam
    loss of APS storage ring during normal
    operations.
  • Will this be worse for the ERL?
  • Preliminary estimates with elegant simulation
    shows that the highest loss rate is 50 nA for
    the high flux mode.
  • Further study is need
  • Lattice optimization.
  • Upgrade elegant to simulate with acceleration.
  • Find detailed distribution of the beam loss
    around the facility.
  • Assess the impact on beam emittance, the linac
    SRF cavities and radiation safety.

13
Energy Aperture Optimization
  • Intra-beam/Touschek scattering beam loss rate
    depends strongly on machine energy aperture.
  • A Method was developed to directly minimize beam
    loss while varying sextupole settings. Energy
    aperture for the APS can be increased to 5 with
    this method, which can reduce beam loss
    substantially.
  • Need to consider the impact on other parts of the
    machine High energy aperture at APS and TAA may
    increases beam loss in the linac.
  • Need more realistic simulation to include such
    factors as orbit errors in the sextupoles,
    acceleration, etc.

14
Collimation strategies
  • Collimation has been applied successfully to many
    high energy accelerators.
  • It removes halo particles and protects downstream
    equipment.
  • Locations of the collimators are determined by
  • location of beam halo source.
  • equipment that needs protection.
  • Lattice function (betatron collimation, energy
    collimation ).
  • For APS ERL the main halo source is the injector,
    at the merger and the end of energy recovery.
  • The areas that need protection are APS, TAA
    beamline areas and SRF cavities of the linac.

15
A possible collimation scheme
  • Preliminary simulation with EGS4 indicates that a
    10 cm lead collimator located at the entry of
    linac can reduce the energy deposit on the
    downstream linac structure to 9.
  • RD work
  • More realistic Monte Carlo simulation, possibly
    coupled with a tracking program such as elegant.

Figure 2 a possible collimation
scheme. courtesy of L. Emery
16
Beam Abort System
  • A beam abort system is needed to protect the APS
    and TAA areas and the linac SRF system.
  • Loss of stored beam
  • At APS storage ring 100 mA beam is safely dumped
    by simply shutting off RF power.
  • The APS-ERL has the same stored energy per length
    of accelerator as APS now.
  • Not a problem for radiation safety.
  • For the SRF cavity the estimated heat deposit 6
    J/cavity.
  • Injector beam
  • Beam power up to 2.5 MW.
  • Additional heat deposit 5 J/cavity, assuming a 1
    ms abort system reaction time.
  • The beam loss can further reduced by combination
    of kickers and beam dumps.

17
Beam Loss Monitoring
  • For radiation protection, the commercially
    available Gamma and Neutron monitors are
    adequate.
  • For the protection of SRF cavities of the linac
  • 500 µs detection time.
  • Sensitivity lt 10 nA of beam loss.
  • Ion chambers, PMT based detectors or Cerekov
    detectors.
  • Preliminary simulation indicates installing a
    monitor every 5 meters along the linac is
    sufficient.
  • Another possibility is to directly measure beam
    current. But can it meet the required sensitivity
    and reliability?

18
A proposed abort system
  • One kicker is located at the linac entrance to
    deflect the injector beam to a beam dump.
  • The second kicker is located before TAA area,
    which directs the accelerating beam to the spent
    beam dump.
  • The third kicker is located at the entrance of
    APS area.
  • Kicker requirement
  • strength 1 mRad
  • rise time 100 to 200 ns.

Figure 3A proposed abort/dump plan. Courte
sy of L. Emery
19
Shielding Consideration
  • In the APS and TAA beamline area
  • The current shielding with some modification is
    adequate for incidental beam loss.
  • Option of shielding improvement should be
    considered if the continuous beam loss can not be
    brought down to satisfactory level with lattice
    design and collimation.
  • Linac and injector tunnel
  • Enhanced shielding is required to handle the high
    beam power.
  • Extra shielding is required for some local areas
    such as beam dumps and collimators.
  • R D work
  • Monte Carlo simulation with EGS4, MARS or other
    programs.

20
Conclusion
  • Beam loss of the proposed APS-ERL upgrade
    presents a challenge for accelerator design.
  • Radiation dose in the APS/TAA area and the energy
    deposit on the linac SRF cavities due to
    continuous beam loss are the two main concerns.
  • RD work should be carried out in these areas
  • Research and understanding the various beam loss
    mechanisms in an ERL environment.
  • Optimize lattice design for both high performance
    and low beam loss rate.
  • Development effective collimation configuration.
  • Development of a fast beam abort system.

21
References
  • 1 M. Borland, Optimization of ERL Energy and
    Undulator Parameters, OAG-TN-2007-021,
    http//www.aps4.anl.gov/operations/ops_www/APSOnly
    /oagTechnicalReports.shtml.
  • 2 G. Hoffstaetter, Status of the Cornell ERL
    Project, FLS 2006 Workshop, working group2,
    http//adweb.desy.de/mpy/FLS2006/proceedings/HTML/
    SESSION.HTM.
  • 3 Advanced Photon Source Safety Assessment
    Document, APS-3.1.2.1.0, June 1996.
  • 4 A. Nassiri, ERL cost update, APS upgrade
    presentations, http//www.aps4.anl.gov/operations/
    ops_www/APSOnly/APS_Upgrade.html.
  • 5 C. Chen, Halo Formation in Intense Linacs,
    Proc. Of LINAC1998, P. 729-733, 1998.
  • 6 Y. Shimosaki, K. Takayama, Nonlinear-resonanc
    e Analysis of Halo-Formation Excited By Beam-Core
    Oscillation, Proc. of EPAC 2000, Vienna,
    Austria, P. 1330-1332, 2000.
  • 7 A. Xiao, Estimate of Beam Loss Rate from
    Touschek Effect for APS-ERL Lattice,
    OAG-TN-2006-048, http//www.aps4.anl.gov/operation
    s/ops_www/APSOnly/oagTechnicalReports.shtml.
  • 8 L. Emery, Beam Simulation and Radiation Dose
    Calculation at the Advanced Photon Source with
    shower, an Interface Program to the EGS4 Code
    System, Proc. of PAC 1995, P. 2309-2311.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com