EMMA Magnet Design Ben Shepherd Magnetics and Radiation Sources Group ASTeC STFC Daresbury Laboratory
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Overview Introduction – the EMMA lattice EMMA magnets – ‘interesting’ aspects 3D modelling Current status Next steps
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April ERLP and EMMA EMMA will be an FFAG addon to the Energy Recovery Linac Prototype (ERLP) project at Daresbury EMMA: 10MeV 20MeV ERLP is in the early stages of commissioning – the photoinjector gun is being commissioned and the booster linac is about to be installed Ready by the end of 2007…?
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April The EMMA Ring 21 cells, each has: 2x D magnet 2x F magnet 84 magnets in main ring + injection + extraction 6m
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April EMMA Cell Layout F D D Cavity 15 MeV Reference orbit centreline Clockwise Beam Inside of ring Outside of ring Magnet Reference Offsets D = mm F = mm Geometry consisting of 42 identical(ish) straight line segments of length mm Long drift mm F Quad mm Short drift mm D Quad mm Magnet Yoke Lengths D = 65 mm F = 55 mm Circumference = m
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Magnet Challenges ‘Combined function’ magnets Dipole and quadrupole fields Independent field and gradient adjustment Movable off-centre quads used Very thin magnets Yoke length of same order as inscribed radius ‘End effects’ dominate the field distribution Full 3D modelling required from the outset Large aperture + offset Good field region (0.1%) must be very wide Close to other components Field leakage into long straight should be minimised Close to each other Extremely small gap between magnets F & D fields interact Full 3D modelling and prototyping essential!
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April F magnet D magnet Modelling carried out using CST EM Studio Combined model with ‘realistic’ steel – B-H curve provided by Tesla also produce Microwave Studio
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April F Magnet
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April D Magnet Smaller horizontal aperture – but further out – so more challenging!
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Reduction of gradient with yoke length (F) 2D model gradient only reached by extending the magnet longitudinally by a factor of 3. However, end effects are dominant, and the integrated gradient is larger than in the hard-edge model.
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Field Clamps Tracking studies suggest that field clamps are needed Reduce the amount of field leaking into the long straight Symmetric or asymmetric? Occupy space and increase power demand
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Field Clamps F magnet D magnet Field at clamp reduced by ~80% in each case Difference between asymmetric and symmetric windows is negligible
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April — QBD — QBF — added — combined max difference ~0.25T/m (5%) Plot of absolute x gradient Differences between separate and combined models F D
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Shape Optimisation Two variables tangent point chamfer size Optimise in terms of normalised integrated gradient quality integrate vertical field along z differentiate w.r.t x normalise to value at centre of vac chamber 0.1% region
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Tangent point variation QBD – tangent point 10mm tangent point 48mm hyperbolic region tangent region pole profile inscribed radius
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April No chamfer 10mm chamfer size of chamfer Variation of chamfer on pole ends Angle can be adjusted too – 45° used up to now OPERA-3D results suggest that a chamfer of up to 5mm has negligible effect on field quality
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Magnet Apertures F magnetD magnet Beam stay clear apertures highlighted F: -28.2…13.8mm (42 mm) D: -41.6…-17.3mm (24.3 mm)
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April D Modelling of F Magnet Using OPERA 2D (Neil Marks): 0.02% over required good gradient region
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April D Modelling In OPERA 3D (Takeichiro Yokoi)
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Tangent point variation 11mm pole shape gradient quality +5% -5%
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Tangent point variation 14mm pole shape gradient quality +5% -5%
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Tangent point variation 15mm pole shape gradient quality +5% -5%
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Tangent point variation 16mm pole shape gradient quality +5% -5%
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Tangent point variation 20mm pole shape gradient quality +5% -5%
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Tangent point variation 28mm pole shape gradient quality +5% -5%
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Optimal result (OPERA-3D) Tangent point at 11mm Good field region: ±26mm
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April D Field Effects Transverse gradient strength changes as the integration region is expanded ‘End effects’ are dominant over full range z
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Pole Shape - Alternatives Optimisation done so far in terms of ‘hyperbolic section’ and ‘tangent section’ ‘End effects’ mean that the field profile is different to a long magnet Maybe try a slightly different pole shape? Difficult to set parameters for a ‘free’ curve Quadratic section? Polynomial approximation of hyperbola? Try to guess optimal shape from ‘constant integrated gradient’ contours What tweaks to the pole shape are required to make the gradient more uniform?
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Future Work Complete yoke shape optimisation Include field clamp plates Model both magnets together Finalise current-turns in combined model Build and test prototypes Requests for quotes were sent out last week Comparison of codes CST & OPERA results must agree Interface: magnet codes tracking codes
EMMA Magnet Design – Ben ShepherdFFAG Grenoble, April Conclusions EMMA Magnets: design is “nearly finished” Good gradient region should be improved Pole shapes could be tweaked further Prototypes are in the process of being ordered Tests from these will validate 3D codes Acknowledgements: Takeichiro Yokoi Neil Marks Neil Bliss