Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCaroline Horton Modified over 9 years ago
1
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 1 Accelerator Physics Topic I Acceleration Joseph Bisognano Synchrotron Radiation Center University of Wisconsin
2
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 2 Relativity
3
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 3 Maxwell’s Equations
4
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 4 Vector Identity Games Poynting Vector Electromagnetic Energy
5
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 5 Propagation in Conductors
6
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 6 Free Space Propagation
7
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 7 Conductive Propagation
8
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 8 Boundary Conditions
9
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 9 AC Resistance
10
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 10 Cylindrical Waveguides Assume a cylindrical system with axis z For the electric field we have And likewise for the magnetic field
11
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 11 Solving for E tangential
12
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 12 Maxwell’s equations then imply (k= /c)
13
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 13 All this implies that E 0z and B 0z tell it all with their equations For simple waveguides, there are separate solutions with one or other zero (TM or TE) For complicated geometries (periodic structures, dielectric boundaries), can be hybrid modes
14
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 14 TE Rectangular Waveguide Mode b a x y
15
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 15 a TE mode Example
16
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 16 Circular Waveguide TE m,n Modes
17
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 17 Circular Waveguide TE m,n Modes
18
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 18 Circular Waveguide TM m,n Modes
19
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 19 Circular Waveguide Modes
20
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 20 Cavities d
21
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 21 Cavity Perturbations Now following C.C. Johnson, Field and Wave Dynamics
22
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 22 Cavity Energy and Frequency ++++ - - Attracts I -I B E Repels
23
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 23 Energy Change of Wall Movement
24
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 24 Bead Pull J. Byrd
25
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 25 Lorentz Theorem Let and be two distinct solutions to Maxwell’s equations, but at the same frequency Start with the expression
26
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 26 Vector Arithmetic
27
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 27 Using curl relations for non-tensor one can show that expression is zero So, in particular, for waveguide junctions with an isotropic medium we have S1S1 S2S2 S3S3
28
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 28 Scattering Matrix Consider a multiport device Discussion follows Altman S1S1 S2S2 SpSp
29
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 29 S-matrix Let a p amplitude of incident electric field normalize so that a p 2 = 2(incident power) and b p 2 = 2(scattered power)
30
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 30 Two-Port Junction Port XPort Y a1a1 b1b1 a2a2 b2b2
31
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 31 Implication of Lorentz Theorem
32
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 32 Lorentz/cont. Lorentz theorem implies or
33
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 33 Unitarity of S-matrix Dissipated power P is given by For a lossless junction and arbitrary this implies
34
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 34 Symmetrical Two-Port Junction
35
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 35 Powering a Cavity b1b1 a1a1 b2b2 a2a2
36
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 36 Power Flow
37
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 37 Power Flow/cont.
38
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 38 Optimization With no beam, best circumstance is ; I.e., no reflected power
39
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 39 At Resonance
40
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 40 Shunt Impedance Consider a cavity with a longitudinal electric field along the particle trajectory Following P. Wilson z1z1 z2z2
41
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 41 Shunt Impedance/cont
42
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 42 Shunt Impedance/cont. Define where P is the power dissipated in the wall (the term) From the analysis of the coupling “ ” where is the generator power
43
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 43 Beam Loading When a point charge is accelerated by a cavity, the loss of cavity field energy can be described by a charge induced field partially canceling the existing field By superposition, when a point charge crosses an empty cavity, a beam induced voltage appears To fully describe acceleration, we need to include this voltage Consider a cavity with an excitation V and a stored energy What is ?
44
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 44 Beam Loading/cont. Let a charge pass through the cavity inducing and experiencing on itself. Assume a relative phase Let charge be bend around for another pass after a phase delay of
45
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 45 Beam Loading/cont. VeVe V2V2 V1V1 V 1 +V 2
46
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 46 Beam Loading/cont. With negligible loss But particle loses Since is arbitrary, and
47
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 47 Beam Loading/cont. Note: we have same constant (R/Q) determining both required power and charge-cavity coupling
48
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 48 Beam Induced Voltage Consider a sequence of particles at
49
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 49 Summary of Beam Loading References: Microwave Circuits (Altman); HE Electron Linacs (Wilson, 1981 Fermilab Summer School )
50
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 50 Vector Addition of RF Voltages VbVb VcVc VbVb V br VgVg V gr
51
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 51 Vector Algebra
52
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 52 Required Generator Power Trig yields
53
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 53 E.g, assume
54
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 54 Scaling of Shunt Impedance Consider a pillbox cavity of radius b & length L
55
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 55 Pillbox Cavity The energy stored and power loss are given by
56
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 56 Summary of Scaling
57
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 57 More Multicell Cavities Given a solution of a single cell cavity, one can consider the coupling of multiple cells in that mode by an expansion where –the expansion coefficients give the strength of excitation of each cell in that mode –coupling comes from perturbation of purely conductive boundary by holes communicating field between cells This is a recondite subject, with all sorts of dangers from “conditional” covergence of Fourier series; see Slater (and Gluckstern) for a complete picture of this
58
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 58 Periodic Structures
59
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 59 Expansion Equations
60
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 60 Holes But if there are holes in the cavity talking to neighboring cells, we have E.g., Bethe says Tangential electric field
61
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 61 Coupled Equations
62
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 62
63
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 63 Result of Floquet Theorem that solutions of differential equations with periodic coefficients have form of periodic function times exp(j z) Phase velocities less than c particle acceleration possible From Slater, RMP 20,473
64
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 64 Pi Mode Tesla Pi-mode
65
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 65 Floquet Theorem For example, for a disk loaded circular cylindrical structure, the TM 01 is of the form
66
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 66 Field Relations for Cylindrical Systems
67
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 67 Field Relations for Cylindrical Systems
68
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 68 Integrated Force at v=c Let be longitudinal force seen by a particle. Consider a trajectory z=vt, r=r 0. The integrated force is then= Only q= /v contributes;i.e. n = /v
69
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 69 E.g., a TM Mode
70
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 70 Force on Relativistic Particle
71
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 71 Panofsky Wenzel Theorem Pure TE mode doesn’t kick; pure TM mode, as in previous example, behaves to cancel denominator, so falls off as -2 ; hybrid modes don’t cancel denominator, so finite kick may obtain even when v=c
72
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 72 Superconductivity Basic mechanism –Condensation of charge carriers into Cooper pairs, coupled by lattice vibrations –Bandgap arises, limiting response to small perturbations (e.g., scattering) –No DC resistance At temperatures above 0 K, some of the Cooper pairs are “ionized” But for DC, these ionized pairs are “shorted out” and bulk resistance remains zero
73
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 73 RF Superconductivity But pairs exhibit some inertia to changing electromagnetic fields, and there are some residual AC fields (sort of a reactance) These residual fields can act on the ionized, normal conducting carriers and cause dissipation But it’s very small at microwave frequencies (getting worse as f 2 ) At 1.3 GHz, copper has R s ~10 milli-ohm At 1.3 GHz, niobium has R s ~800 nano-ohm at 4.2 K At 1.3 GHz, niobium has R s ~15 nano-ohm at 2 K Q’s of 10 10 vs. 10 4
74
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 74 CEBAF RF Parameters Superconducting 5-cell cavity in CEBAF
75
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 75 CEBAF Cavity Assembly
76
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 76 Cavity Specifications Frequency1497 MHz Nominal length0.5 meters Gradient>5 MeV/m Accel Current200 A 5 passes Number cells5 R/Q480 ohms Nominal Q 0 2.4·10 9 Loaded Q L 6.6 ·10 6
77
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 77 What’s Q L ? Run in linac mode, essentially on crest, = 0 In storage rings, 0 for longitudinal focusing Wall losses V 2 /R=(2.5 · 10 6 volts) 2 /(480 · 2.4·10 9 ) are 5.4 watts Power to beam: ( 200 A 5 passes) ·(2.5 · 10 6 volts) is 2500 watts
78
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 78 Would Copper Work Typical Q is now 10 4 Wall losses (2.5 · 10 6 volts) 2 /(480 · 10 4 ) are now 1.3 MW vs. beam power of 2500 watts Some optimizations could yields “2’s” of improvement More importantly, SRF losses are at 2 K, which requires cryogenic refrigeration. Efficiencies are order 10 -3 So, 5 watts at 2 K is 5 kW at room temperature, but still factor of 100 to the good
79
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 79 Higher Order Modes There are higher order modes, which can be excited by the beam These can generate wall losses, and fields can act on beam to generate destructive collective effects First question is whether wall losses are large or small compared to fundamental wall losses
80
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 80 Loss Factors When a bunch passes through a cavity, it loses energy of
81
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 81 Loss Factor for HOMs Bunch spectrum extends out to For a typical 1 ps linac bunch, For for a 1.5 GHz fundamental, there are many tens of longitudinal HOMs for the beam to couple; coupling is weaker than to fundamental because of more rapid temporal and spatial variation From codes,
82
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 82 Power Estimates For 1 mA CEBAF 5-pass beam, with 0.5 pC/superbunch, we have only10mW of loss But in, say FEL application, with 100 pC bunches at 5mA, we have 10 watts in the wall, more than the power dissipated by fundamental! So extraction of HOM power is issue for high current applications with short bunches
83
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 83 Couplers and Kicks Waveguide couplers break cylindrical symmetry Result is that the nominal TM 01 mode now has TE content and m 0; hybridized By Panofsky-Wenzel, introduces steering and skew quad fields that require compensation
84
Topic One: Acceleration UW Spring 2008 Accelerator Physics J. J. Bisognano 84 Homework: Topic I From Accelerator Physics, S.Y. Lee –Reading: Chapter 3, VIII, p. 352 & onward –Problems:3.8.1 (really table 3.10), 3.8.2, 3.8.4 The next generation CEBAF cavity can achieve 20 MV/m gradients with a 7 cell structure. a) Assuming R/Q is 7/5 higher, what would be the heat load generated per cavity if the Q is unchanged? b) How much higher a Q is necessary to main the heat load at the levels from the first generation cavity discussed in the lecture? Consider a single cell RF system operating at 500 MHz with an effective length of 0.3 meters, which is to be operated at a gradient of 2 MV/m with beam current of 100 mA. Assume the R/Q of the cavity is 100 ohms and that the Q from resistive wall losses is 40,000. A) Calculate the optimal coupling coefficient for powering the cavity with the 100 a mA beam passing through it. B) Calculate the power necessary with 100 mA beam to power the cavity. C) Calculate the power received by the beam and the power dissipated in wall losses. D) Describe what will happen to the power requirements and reflected power from the cavity if the beam is lost, but the feedback system attempts to maintain the 2 MV/meter gradient. A CEBAF problem: Use the nominal specs given in lecture a) For a 1 mA at 5 MV/m calculate total power and reflected power on resonance and 10 degrees off resonance with bunch on crest. b) If this beam is allowed to pass for a second time through the cavity for energy recovery at 170 degrees off accelerating crest, simultaneously with the first pass beam on crest, calculate the total and reflected power when the cavity is tuned on resonance.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.