Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Beam Diagnostic System Analysis in HIRFL-CSRm at IMP, China for the Bunched Electron Cooling Demo Experiment.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Beam Diagnostic System Analysis in HIRFL-CSRm at IMP, China for the Bunched Electron Cooling Demo Experiment."— Presentation transcript:

1 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Beam Diagnostic System Analysis in HIRFL-CSRm at IMP, China for the Bunched Electron Cooling Demo Experiment Haipeng Wang Lijun Mao (Experiment) at IMP and Yuhong Zhang, (LDRD 2014 PI) and He Zhang (Cooling Simulation) at JLab Thanks also for contribution from Jie Li, Xiaoming Ma, and He Zhao, IMP, China and ChinaVasily Parkhomchuk and Vladimir Reva1, BINP, Russia

2 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) HIREL-CSR Layout and Performance Specification EC-35 cooler

3 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Proposed Bunched Electron Cooling Experiment Parameters

4 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) EC-35 DC Cooler and Commissioned Performance 1—electron gun, 2—electrostatic bending plates, 3—toroid, 4—solenoid of cooling section, 5—magnet platform, 6—collector for electron beam, 7—dipole corrector, 8— vacuum flange for CSRm. Two BPMs placed in the cooling station, one is at upstream of electron beam at gun side in position 9, another one is at downstream collector side in the mirror symmetric position relative to 9. vacuum 2  10 11 mbar, high voltage 20 kV, electron beam current 1.6 A, collector efficiency >99.99%, angle of magnetic field line in cooling section <2  10 -5 Commissioned in March 2003

5 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Terminal Circuit Diagram and Average Current Measurement ions electrons Collector efficiency

6 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) EC-35 RF Modulation + DC Bias Scheme for Bunched Electron Beam Formation bunch length f m  3 MHz

7 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Beam Diagnostic Devices for Bunched Electron Cooling Demo Experiment ParametersEC35-electronCSRm-ionsData-acquisition average beam current dc readings on PSs, sampling resistors DCC(current)T(transfor mer)s existing calibra. and DAS peak beam currentmod. freq. f m rf or harmonic freqs n*f 0 fiber optical link readout Beam positioncapacitive BPMs existing calibra. and DAS Beam trans.- profile capacitive BPMs (off-line screen) residual gas BPMsDAS Beam long.- profile resonant BCMs on BPMs resonant BCMs on BPMs or DCCTs fast scope and on- line DAS Cooling ratesn.a.Schorttky resonator and pickups fast scope and on- line DAS Off-line side-band signal analysis existingmodificationnew installation

8 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) RF Amplifier Resonant Circuit Design, Prototype and test Result Courtesy of Dr. L.J. Mao, IMP Input ( mV p-p ) Output ( V p-p ) 100 4.63 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 25.4 73.8 145 222 305 398 476 547 606 simulationsOutput voltage and impedance measurements Bench prototype circuit

9 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Electron Gun Simulation by CST EM-Static and PS Tracking Solvers E-potential E-field-am Solid beam Hollow beam

10 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Solid to Hollow Beam Formation in Simulation and Experiments Reduction of transversal instability of cooled ion beam. It may be achieved by using the electron beam with the density increasing radially but low at the center. Problems arisen due to space charge effect may be partially solved by using the hollow electron beam with low transversal electric field near its center. Reduction of the effect of recombination between the accumulated ions and the electron beam. Suppress the electron heating effect in the center

11 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Existing BPM Devices at EC-35 Cooler and CSRm Ring

12 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Capacitive Beam Pickup Principles and Sensitivity to Beam Current Our bunched beam electron cooling experiment is at the  range of 0.121~0.247. So either type of the pickup is OK for the BCM For RCs <<1, f m <<f c, R is preferred in low resistance for high roll-off frequency f c. Too weak! We need to modify the external circuit of BPM to be a resonant circuit in order to improve the bunch edge sensitivity and S/N ratio.

13 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Modification Suggestion to Existing BPM External Circuits to BCM Can tune harmonic of the ion accelerating frequency f 0 and electron modulation frequency f m separately on different BPMs if not synchronized Detune due to the resistive loss is small and the inductance can be compensated by a tunable inductor element. Bunch beam charging time  t >> the resonance RLC circuit (or cavity) filling time Q/  r. Say 2 times at least. So the induced voltage V(t) will not drop between the bunches 1/f 0 -  t. Data sampling rate f s has to be fast enough to resolve the bunch rise time scale of ~10ns.

14 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) 1D Signal Calculation for Square Bunch and Ring-shape Pickup Electron (red solid line) and ion (green solid line) bunch signals picked up by modified capacitive type BCM plates and their bunch shapes (dashed red line for electron, dashed green line for ion) calculated by MathCAD program for  =0.121, average beam currents of 70mA for electron and 3mA for 12 C +6. The voltage signal is picked up on the total shunt resistor of R=150 . The voltage signal gain on the ion current is 40dB (80dB in power) for this display. In this calculation example, there are 7 electron bunches with in one ion bunch.

15 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) 1D Signal Calculation for Gaussian Bunch and Ring-shape Pickup Gaussian bunch shape distribution (black) in 7ns (rms) bunch length current picked up by 50  shunt impedance’s voltage (red, calculation) and comparison to the experimental data (blue) for one of 12 C +6 bunches accelerated in the CSRm ring at the  0.5 velocity. The blue data is measured by a fast oscilloscope on a L s =15cm pickup cylinder. The voltage gain of such signal is ~350. The ion current is ~3  A. Signal ringing on the back is due to the pickup circuit.

16 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Resonant Signal Processing and Sampling Rate to Improve S/N Res. BCMsE-coolerIon-ring voltage gain0 dB40 dB sensitivity7.8V/70mA6.2mV/3.2uA S/Nn.a.1938 sampling rate 2 13  1.2 MHz frequency 10  3MHz10  f rf tunable

17 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) BCM Resonant Circuit Design Parameters

18 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Using Longitudinal Schottky Diodes to Measure the Cooling Rates Courtesy of Dr. L.J. Mao, IMP

19 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Summary Bunched electron Beam Cooling Demo Experiment at IMP has been proposed in 2014 at JLab and carried out by the collaboration team at 2015 with JLab LDRD fund and IMP internal fund. HV power supplies and RF amplifier hardware are under commissioning for the electron beam modulation scheme Demo experiment is scheduled in 2016 Modification of IMP CSRm BPM system into a BCM measurement device to measure the beam bunch length and peak current is possible for our demo bunched electron cooling experiment Using existing EC-35 BPM system, a minor circuit modification (or using sum/diff. combined signals) using a resonant circuit is possible for the electron bunch length and shape measurement Modification to resonant Schottky, using Palmer pickup devices (in CSRs ring only), extraction kicker in CSRe ring (under the study) for the ion beam bunch length and current measurement will greatly increase the S/N ratio. The new BCM circuit design parameters have been specified. EC-35 Cooler and CSRm ring can do all of these schemes for the demo experiment: DC to coasting, bunch to coasting and bunch to bunch, synchronization and non-sychronization

20 MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) References [1] Yuhong Zhang, He Zhang, et al JLab LDRD 2014 proposal, funded in FY2015. [2] CSR Design Group, “CSR Storage Ring Parameters List”, HIRFL-CSR/General/02-1, January 25, 2002, Submitted by J.W. Xia. [3] Li Guo-Hong, etc. “A Beam Position Monitor System for Electron Cooler in HIRFL 2 CSR (in Chinese)”, Nuclear Physics Review, Issue 1, Vol. 27, March, 2010, Article No. 1007 - 4627 (2010) 04 - 0043 – 05. [4] V. Bocharov et al. “HIRFL-CSR electron cooler commissioning”, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research A 532 (2004) 144–149. [5] E. Bekhtene, L.J. Mao, H. Wang and Y. Zhang, the discussion of bunched beam formation by the RF modulation scheme in the MEIC collaboration meeting in March, 2014. [6] L.J.Mao et al, “Longitudinal electron cooling experiments at HIRFL-CSRe”, to be published in 2015. [7] A.V. Bubley et al. “Measuring a hollow electron beam profile”, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research A 532 (2004) 413–417. [8] A.V. Bubley et al, “The Electron Gun with Variable Beam Profile for Optimization of Electron Cooling”, Proceedings of EPAC 2002, Paris, France, WEPRI049. [9] G. R. Lambertson, Dynamic Devices – Pickups and Kickers, LBL-22085, BECON-63, LBL, UC Berkeley, August, 1986. [10] D. A. Goldberg and G. R. Lambertson, Dynamic Devices, A Primer on Pickups and Kickers LBL-31664, November, 1991. [11] Strehl P. Beam Instrumentation and Diagnostics. Berlin Heidelberg : Springer, 2006, 155-211. [12] Phone meeting conversation between Haipeng Wang, He Zhang and Yuhong Zhang at JLab with Lijun Mao at IMP on August 5, 2015. [13] Strehl, P., Klabunde, J., Schaa, V., Vilhjalmsson, H., Wilms, D., Das Phasen-sondensystem am Unilac : Sondendimensionierung und Signalauswertung, GSI-Report 79–13, (1979), translated for the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory by Leo Kanner Associates, Redwood City, (1980), LA-TR-80–43. [14] JLab technote publication JLab-TN-15-039.


Download ppt "MEIC Collaboration Meeting (October 5-7, 2015) Beam Diagnostic System Analysis in HIRFL-CSRm at IMP, China for the Bunched Electron Cooling Demo Experiment."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google