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LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 H-/H0 current monitor F. Zocca, F. Roncarolo, B. Cheymol, A. Ravni, S. Burger, G.J. Focker, J. Tan BE/BI
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Concept H 0 / H - current monitor needed in front of the dump - to allow efficient setting up of the injection - to monitor the efficiency of the stripping foil (detect degradation and failure) DUMP H 0 monitorH- monitor POLARIZATION FRAMES for secondary emission suppression Titanium, negative High-Voltage (-1kV), 1 mm thick Titanium plates, grounded (0V), 1 mm thick The H 0 /H - current monitors are supposed to be plates intercepting the H 0 and H - ions and acting as a Faraday cup for the stripped electrons (stripping & collection) Design principle
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 General specifications Robust and simple (lifetime ≈ 20 years, no maintenance) Radiation dose of 0.1-1.0 MGy per year Vacuum level 10 -8 mbar with beam Withstand the BSW4 pulsed magnetic field of 0.4T and at the same time do not perturb the field by more than ≈ 0.1 % Transverse dimensions (including support structure) not exceeding dump dimensions Sensitive areas maximized to cover as much as beam halo as possible Withstand the heat load in normal operation condition and a full Linac4 pulse load (2.5×10 13 H- ions), in case of failure of the stripping foil, on a one-off basis, several times per year Dynamic range: 5×10 7 – 5×10 12 ions (for H- and H0 alike) Absolute accuracy ± 20 %, relative accuracy ± 10 % Time resolution: integral over the full injection time (few s – 100 s) – however higher resolution is welcome
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Plates material: titanium Material Conductivity (1/ m) (for signal read-out) Thermal load ( T) for a full Linac4 pulse Melting point Neutron yield (w.r.t. n° of protons) Signal Q (e/H - ) with NO external fields* Signal Q (e/H 0 ) with NO external fields* Compatibility with BS4 field Graphite 6.1 × 10 4 67 K3773 K0.41 %- 1.83- 0.90YES Aluminum 3.77 × 10 7 50 K933 K0.57 %- 1.63- 0.80NO Titanium 2.34 × 10 6 80 K1933 K0.99 %- 1.42- 0.70YES Copper 5.96 × 10 7 98 K1356 K1.0 %- 1.22- 0.60NO Tungsten 1.89 × 10 7 229 K3683 K6.4 %- 0.68- 0.33NO Fully acceptable Acceptable (not ideal) Not acceptable Among low-Z conductive materials, titanium is the only one with acceptable impact on the BS4 field quality thanks to the relatively “low” conductivity Requirements: good enough conductivity (for signal read-out) but compatible with BSW4 field quality, low thermal load, low neutron yield (low activation), high signal level * taking into account losses due to electron backscattering and secondary emission
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Charge signal estimate Q (e/H - ) = -2*(1- ) + 2*SEY P + 2*SEY BS + Y D Q (e/H 0 ) = - (1- ) + SEY P + SEY BS + Y D fraction of backscattered electrons (e - energy range ≈ 1-87 keV) SEY P = Secondary Emission Yield of the Proton (e - energy range ≈ 1-20eV) (SEY of H- entering the plate = SEY of proton exiting) SEY BS = Secondary Emission Yield of one BackScattered electron Y D = fraction of “delta-rays” electrons emitted by the plate owing to collisions with the proton beam (e - energy range ≈ 100-400 keV) Proton energy = 160 MeV electron energy = 87 keV Material SEY P SEY BS YDYD Q (e/H - )Q (e/H 0 ) Titanium0.230.0380.01140.025- 1.42- 0.70
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Backscattering coefficients for different materials MaterialBS coeff Carbon (graphite) 5.2 % Aluminum14 % Titanium23 % Copper29 % Tungsten48 % Al Oxide11 % Ti Oxide17 % FLUKA simulation : 87 keV electron beam on a 1mm thick plate Simulations in agreement with literature data: E.H. Darlington “Backscattering of 10- 100 keV electrons from thick targets”, J.Phys.D:Appl.Phys., vol 8, 1975. Energy distribution of the backscattered electrons normalized to the number of primaries
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Effect of plate oxidation on the BS coeff Ti oxide layerBS coeff 0 nm (Ti plate) 23.24 % 10 nm23.20 % 50 nm23.01 % 100 nm22.78 % 500 nm22.66 % 1 um22.31 % 5 um19.75 % 10 um17.44 % 50 um17.10 % 100 um17.09 % 1 mm (Ti oxide plate) 17.03 % FLUKA simulation (87 keV electron beam): 1 mm Titanium plate + surface layer of Ti oxide of different thickness 87 keV electron range in Ti = 25 um backscattering is a “bulk” effect rather then a “surface” effect (mainly takes place within a distance of 1 to 10 um from the surface) a typical oxidation layer of several nanometers does not affect significantly the BS coefficient for 87 keV electrons
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Y D : “delta-rays” electrons Yield FLUKA simulation (B. Cheymol): 160 MeV proton beam electron yield of 2-3% (w.r.t. the proton-primaries) not much depending on the plate material Energy distribution of the delta-rays electrons exiting a titanium plate Electrons created by elastic collisions Electrons created by pair production T max = 378keV : maximum energy transfer to a free electron by a 160 MeV proton NB: for the calculation of the charge collected on the plate, the SEY due to these high-energy electrons can be considered negligible zoom
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Linac 4 current (average during pulse) = 40 mA Number of particles per pulse = 1×10 14 Max number of particles per pulse per PSB ring = 2.5 × 10 13 Stripping foil of ≈ 200 g/cm 2 : H- stripped to H0 ≈ 1 %, H- stripped to H+ ≈ 10 -6 level BUT assume that 1% of H- from the LINAC4 beam will miss the foil and impact the dump nominal number of particles hitting the monitor per injection = 2.5 × 10 11 for H0 and H- alike F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Expected signals (1) Minimum sensitivity = 5 × 10 7 particles per injection (to resolve a change in the unstripped H0 beam flux of about 10 -4 of the full injected beam, and about 1% of the lowest intensity beam) Maximum intensity = 5 × 10 12 particles per injection(20 % of the full injected beam, in case of dropping stripping efficiency) Desired dynamic range = 5 × 10 7 - 5 × 10 12 particles (for H- and H0 alike)
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Expected signals (2) Q (e/H - )Q (Coul) MINQ (Coul) NOMQ (Coul) MAX H- SEY + BS + Y D - 1.42- 1.13*10 -11 - 5.66*10 -8 - 1.13*10 -6 BS + Y D - 1.52- 1.21*10 -11 - 6.06*10 -8 - 1.21*10 -6 Full deposition -2- 1.6*10 -11 - 8*10 -8 - 1.6*10 -6 H0 SEY + BS + YD - 0.70- 0.56*10 -11 - 2.78*10 -8 - 0.56*10 -6 BS + Y D - 0.75- 0.60*10 -11 - 2.98*10 -8 - 0.60*10 -6 Full deposition -1- 0.80*10 -11 - 4*10 -8 - 0.80*10 -6 Q (e/H - ) Average Pulse Current MIN Average Pulse Current NOM Average Pulse Current MAX H- SEY + BS + Y D - 1.42113 nA0.56 mA11 mA BS + Y D - 1.52121 nA0.6 mA12 mA Full deposition -2160 nA0.8 mA16 mA H0 SEY + BS + YD - 0.7056 nA0.28 mA5.6 mA BS + Y D - 0.7560 nA0.3 mA6 mA Full deposition -180 nA0.4 mA8 mA
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Monitor geometry preliminary proposal Top view Signal plates Polarization frames Missing on the front frame only
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Polarization rings: E-field effect frame (- 1000 V) View from the top monitor plates Simulations including surrounding beam pipe E-field map on the monitor plates Effect due to the missing lateral frame CST Particle Studio tracking simulation Electron energy range = 10-30 eV Isotropic angular distribution Stationary condition No space charge
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 E-field + B-field effect (BSW4 magnet 0.4T) Uniform vertical B-field of 0.4 T Stationary condition, no space charge Secondary emission electrons (10 eV - 30eV) Curvature radius for 30eV electrons ≈ 30 m Backscattered electrons (60 keV – 90 keV) Curvature radius for 90keV electrons ≈ 2.6 mm “Delta-rays” electrons (125 keV – 375 keV) Curvature radius for 375 keV electrons ≈ 6 mm 10 mm
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Beam vertical envelope Vertical Circulating Betam4.1 Beta-beat%25 Max betam5.125 Mismatch1.4 Betatron env. 4sigmamm9.65 Dispersionm0 Dp/p0.0044 Max. momentum displacementmm0 Mech. Tol.mm1 orbitmm2.20 Max. offset for paintingmm8.00 Max. Beam env.±mm20.9 Tot. envelope mm 42 Vertical Injected Betam8 Betatron env. 98%6.35 Dispersionm0 Dp/pmm0.00 Max. momentum displacementm0 Mech. Tol.mm1 Delivery precisionmm1 Max. offset for paintingmm10 Max. Beam env.±mm18.3 Tot. envelope mm 37 Emittance = 0.35 mm mrad (instead of previous 0.5 mm mrad) Courtesy of C.Bracco - TE/ABT 2.5 (98 %) 4
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Beam horizontal envelope Emittance = 0.35 mm mrad (instead of previous 0.5 mm mrad) Courtesy of C.Bracco - TE/ABT Horizontal circulating Betam5.6 Beta-beat%25 Max betam7 Mismatch1.34* Betatron env. 4sigmamm10.80 Dispersionm1.4 Dp/p0.0044 Max. momentum displacementmm6.16 Mech. Tol.mm1 orbitmm4.00 Max. offset for paintingmm2.00 Max. Beam env.±mm24.0 Tot. envelope mm 48 Horizontal injected Betam10 Betatron env. 98%mm5.92 Dispersionm1.4 Dp/p0.0044 Max. momentum displacementmm6.16 Mech. Tol.mm1 Delivery precisionmm1.00 Max. offset for paintingmm2.00 Max. Beam env.±mm16.1 Tot. envelope mm 32 Before 56 mm Before 34.8 mm * Old data 1.55 2.5 (98 %) 4
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Courtesy of C.Bracco Beam horizontal envelopes SiC Dump 110 mm + 30 mm Pol. Frames
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Courtesy of C.Bracco Beam horizontal envelopes SiC Dump 110 mm + 30 mm Pol. Frames Separation H0/H+ = 2.8 mm Distance dump edge/ H0 beam = 0.5 mm Separation H0/H- = 10.8 mm
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Courtesy of C.Bracco Beam horizontal envelopes C Dump 160 mm + 30 mm Pol. Frames Separation H0/H+ ~ 1.1 mm (!) Distance dump edge/ H0 beam = 0.5 mm Separation H0/H- = 9.2 mm
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 How to fix the monitor to the dump Molybdenum (?) inserts, with holes, brazed on SiC dump Macor (or Chromox = chromium-doped alumina) arms screwed on the inserts and holding the monitor screw detailFinal view inside the pipe Preliminary proposal (by A.Ravni) in case of SiC dump
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Electronics read-out & cabling Charge integration or current read-out: choice may depend on the amplitude of the signals induced on the plates by the circulating proton beam (to be checked) Control signal needed for start-stop integration/current read-out, according to the injection time window Cables: mechanical stability and long-term reliability (20 years life time…) - rigid/semi-rigid ceramic-insulated rods/cables - option: ceramic powder around the conductor (LHC schottky monitors) - 3mm diameter to be allocated for each cable - possibility of embedding cables in the dump (grooves) to be investigated 2 cables for signal read-out (H- and H0)… + 2 redundancy needed ? 2 cables for high voltage (-1kV) to polarize the frames 2 cables for test signals? (to inject a test current on the plates by means of a small resistance connected to the internal side of the feed-through) 2 (+4?) BNC + 2 SHV feed-through on the flange (all not ground-insulated) Minimum: 4 cables --- Maximum: 8 cables
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F.Zocca - LIU-PSB Review on H-/H0 dumps – 18 th April 2013 Conclusions & outlook Material choice Design principle Range of expected signal intensities Final precise dimensions (w.r.t. dump size & beam dynamics simulations) How to fix the structure to the dump Final simulation of the impact on the BSW4 field (by magnet group) Cables type and quantity Final integration in the system (design office) Read-out electronics We have finalized: On-going developments:
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