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Breakout Session SC5 – Control Systems

Breakout Session SC5 – Control Systems. Physics Requirements for LCLS Control System P. Krejcik. Accelerator Physics Driving Controls Design. Precision beams Low emittance Short bunch. Single pass Every shot different. Compatibility Other programs Old controls. Timing distribution

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Breakout Session SC5 – Control Systems

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  1. Breakout Session SC5 – Control Systems Physics Requirements for LCLS Control System P. Krejcik

  2. Accelerator Physics Driving Controls Design • Precision beams • Low emittance • Short bunch Single pass Every shot different • Compatibility • Other programs • Old controls • Timing distribution • RF Phase control Simultaneous Single shot Read all devices Process/respond in < 1/120th sec. • Feedback • Trajectory • Bunch length • Energy • Applications • Machine tuning

  3. X- X-band LCLS Machine Stability Tolerance Budget From P. Emma: RMS tolerance budget for <12% rms peak-current jitter or <0.1% rms final e− energy jitter. All tolerances are rms levels and the voltage and phase tolerances per klystron for L2 and L3 are Nk larger, assuming uncorrelated errors, where Nk is the number of klystrons per linac. 125 fs tolerance on X-band system

  4. Key facility factors driving controls design • Undulator machine protection • Single pulse abort capability • Compatibility with non-LCLS beams • Straight through beams some months of the year • Hybridize new controls with old SLC controls

  5. Design solutions for specialized diagnostics • Low emittance beams require • Precision wire scanners • Average projected emittance • Almost non-invasive diagnostic • Profile monitor • Single pulse full beam profile • OTR screens inhibit sase operation • Low energy injector beams require YAG screens • Slice emittance reconstruction • Transverse RF deflecting cavity with profile monitor

  6. 5 Emittance gex,y measurements (Profs, Wire Scanners) : Accelerator System Diagnostics • 180 BPMs at quadrupoles and in each bend system 8 Energy (BPM) E, energy spread (Prof) sE measurements : 2 Transverse RF deflecting Cavities for slice measurements 5 Bunch length monitors RF gun L0 L1 L2 L3 X upstream linac BC1 BC2 DL1 DL2 undulator LTU Dump

  7. Linac stripline BPMs • Need to replace old BPM electronics • Commercially available processing units look promising • Beam testing of module as soon as funding available • Must work with existing linac striplines http://www.i-tech.si

  8. Design solutions for specialized diagnostics • Short bunch, high peak current beams require • Longitudinal bunch profile measurement with sub-picosecond resolution • Transverse RF deflecting cavity • Electro optic bunch length measurement • A non-invasive bunch length monitoring system for pulse-to pulse feedback control • Spectral power detectors for CSR and CDR • A detector sensitive to micro-bunch instabilities • CSR spectrum

  9. Timing system requirements • Synchronization of fiducials in low-level RF with distribution of triggers in the control system 360 Hz fiducials phase locked to low level RF 1/360 s Linac 476 MHz Main Drive Line Sector feed Fiducial detector SLC Control System 119 MHz Event Generator 360 Hz Triggers 8.4 ns±10 ps Master Pattern Generator 128-bit word beam codes

  10. 3 Levels in the Timing System • “coarse” triggers at 360 Hz with 8.4 ns delay step size and 10 ps jitter • Gated data acquisition (BPMs) • Pulsed devices (klystrons) • Phase lock of the low-level RF 0.1 S-band (100 fs) phase stability • Timing measurement of the pump-probe laser w.r.t. electron beam in the undulator 10 fs resolution

  11. Bunch length and arrival time from Electro Optic measurements at SPPS A. Cavalieri Principal of temporal-spatial correlation single pulse Line image camera EO xtal analyzer polarizer Er width centroid 30 seconds, 300 pulses: sz = 530 fs ± 56 fs rms Dt = 300 fs rms

  12. Electro-Optical Sampling at SPPS – A. Cavalieri et al. <300 fs Single-Shot 200 mm thick ZnTe crystal Ti:Sapphire laser e- Timing Jitter 170 fs rms e- temporal information is encoded on transverse profile of laser beam

  13. Undulator trajectory launch loop to operate at 120 Hz, <1 pulse delay Damps jitter below 10 Hz Linac orbit loops to operate at 10 Hz because of corrector response time Closed Loop Response of Orbit Feedback- L. Hendrickson Antidamp Damp Gain bandwidth shown for different loop delays

  14. 4 energy feedback loops 2 bunch length feedback loops 120 Hz nominal operation, <1 pulse delay Feedback model (J. Wu) PID controller (proportional, integral, derivative) Cascade control for sequential loops (off-diagonal matrix elements) E E E Φrf(L2) Φrf(L3) Vrf(L1) DL1 sz Φrf(L1) sz E Φrf(L2) Vrf(L0) DL1 Spectr. BSY 50B1 BC2 BC1 DL2 L1 L2 L3 L0 Energy and Bunch Length Feedback Loops

  15. Energy feedback loop response - J. WuP. Emma Bode Plot (E/E) P:0.2 P:0.2; I:0.5 I:0.5 • 3 different settings of the PID controller • Integral term dominant

  16. Bunch length feedback loop response - J. WuP. Emma Bode Plot (I/I) P:0.2 P:0.2; I:0.5 I:0.5 • 3 different settings of the PID controller • Integral term dominant

  17. Controls Issues for Power Supplies • 16 types out of a total of 55 power supplies • Tightest regulation tolerance is 5*10-5 (BC’s) • transductor regulation circuit • Able to use commercial supplies, with SLAC engineering effort for: • AC • interlocks • regulator circuits • control interface

  18. Controls Issues for Power Supplies • A few unique power supplies: • Parallel supplies for linac quads to switch between LCLS operation at low current and HEP operation at full field. • Fast orbit feedback requires power supplies and corrector magnets to respond in <8 ms (120 Hz). • Single Bunch Beam Dumper (SBBD) is a 120 Hz pulsed magnet supply

  19. MPS - Beam Rate Limiting • Single bunch beam dumper (SBBD) • Linac beam up to the dog-leg bend in the LTU can be maintained at 120 Hz • Favorable for upstream stability and feedback operation • Pulsed magnet allows • Single shot, 1 Hz, 10 Hz, 120 Hz down the LTU line • Failure in pulsed magnet will turn off beam at gun • Tune-up dump at end of LTU • Max. 10 Hz to tune-up dump • Stopper out will arm MPS for stopping beam with the SBBD

  20. MPS - Beam Rate Limiting • Conditions that will stop the beam at the SBBD • Tune-up dump at end of LTU is out, and: • Beam loss at detected by either by PLIC along the undulator chamber, or by the PIC’s between the undulator modules • Invalid readings from undulator • Vacuum • Magnet movers • BPMs • Energy error in the LTU • PIC’s at the collimators • Launch orbit feedback failing • Magnet power supplies for some key elements

  21. Summary • LCLS will be a challenging machine to control and operate – dynamic control, not passive operation! • Controls integrated into the LCLS design concept • Single pulse readback of all devices • Fast feedback control essential for stability • New and challenging techniques for timing distribution and measurement. • Diagnostics being developed hand-in-hand with controls and feedbacks

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