1 / 19

A Modular Path Corrector for 4GLS

A Modular Path Corrector for 4GLS. Peter Williams ASTeC - Daresbury Laboratory & Cockcroft Institute ERL07 Workshop, 23 rd May 2007. 4GLS Beamlines Schematic. Dual High Peak Current XUV-FELs High Average Current ID Loop & High Peak Current VUV-FEL Share main linac (three beams!)

leann
Download Presentation

A Modular Path Corrector for 4GLS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Modular Path Corrector for 4GLS Peter Williams ASTeC - Daresbury Laboratory & Cockcroft Institute ERL07 Workshop, 23rd May 2007

  2. 4GLS Beamlines Schematic • Dual High Peak Current XUV-FELs • High Average Current ID Loop & High Peak Current VUV-FEL Share main linac (three beams!) • Dual High Peak Current IR-FELs

  3. 4GLS Beamlines: High Average Current Loop

  4. 1 nC 77 pC ~9° 180° Path Length Adjustment for ERLs • Figure shows bunch placement on main linac RF waveform • We must energy recover the 77pC HACL bunches • Ensure π out of phase for deceleration • Reliably introduce path length retardation of up to 1 wavelength ~23cm • Must do achromatically, ie without introducing transverse dispersion (ηx), desirable to do this independently from longitudinal dispersion (R56), possible to achieve isochronously (R56=0)

  5. Path Length Adjustment in Daresbury ERL Prototype • Nominal Gun Energy 350 keV • Injector Energy 8.35 MeV • Circulating Beam Energy 35 MeV • Linac RF Frequency 1.3 GHz • Bunch Repetition Rate 81.25MHz • Max Bunch Charge 80 pC • Bunch train 100 ms • Max Average Current 13 µA • In ERLP this will be done by physically moving first arc – a triple bend achromat. Also used in JAEA ERL, SDALINAC + others • Impractical for 4GLS – mechanical tolerances preclude accurate control when arc is wider than ~10m 11.5 cm trombone

  6. Other Approaches for Path Length Adjustment in ERLs • JLab ERL uses Bates arcs / kickers • Two doglegs and a π-bend dipole arranged for isochronicity • Symmetric kicker dipoles at π entrance increase path length • Narrow width not practical for 4GLS configuration • π-bend dipole would need to be 4.2m for 1.5T field • CTF3 use variable field, one-period wiggler • Only achieves small path length difference • Difficult to compensate for proportionally large R56 variation – for δL=23cm, ΔR56=17cm • Cornell propose varying radius of path around CESR ring • Cross talk between path correction and fixed ID arc lattice in 4GLS • Douglas proposed magnetic mirror • Unusual shape and intricate edge structure make manufacture impractical

  7. Progressive Bunch Compression in 4GLS HACL Final Decompression / Path Correction System VUV-FEL Beam Propagation Shortest bunch at VUV-FEL • An additional requirement – decompress the bunch for linac re-entry! • Otherwise we cannot energy recover

  8. Path Length Adjustment for 4GLS HACL • Two non-dispersive doglegs girder mounted such that they move transverse to the beamline introducing extra path, coupled by set of bellows that expand accordingly. Our moving doglegs • These introduce negative longitudinal dispersion (arc-like R56) (higher energy particles retarded with respect to bunch centre) • Compensate for this with classical dispersive chicane, introduces positive longitudinal dispersion (chicane-like R56) - overcompensate to decompress the bunches. Our final decompressor • Chicane need not physically move, dispersion between centre dipoles ensures only small angle deviation compensates → achieve by ramping magnets Minimal displacement Maximal displacement

  9. Engineering Layout of Doglegs Thanks to Simon Appleton, DL

  10. Path Correction System Placement in 4GLS HACL Final Decompression / Path Correction System

  11. Final Decompression / Path Correction System Path Correction System Placement in 4GLS HACL XUV-FEL Injector Main Linac HACL Injector Note final decompressor not quite correct in this drawing – transverse displacement of ~0.5m to doglegs ~1.0m

  12. Characteristics of the 4GLS HACL Moving Doglegs Dispersion in Doglegs – Maximal Displacement Note zero dispersion in expanding section! R56 in Doglegs – Maximal Displacement

  13. Characteristics of the 4GLS HACL Moving Doglegs β functions in Doglegs – Maximal Displacement Quadrupole Strength in Doglegs as a function of horizontal displacement angle We need to ramp these to cancel edge effects introduced by the movement

  14. Characteristics of the 4GLS HACL Re-Entry Section Dispersion through final compressor and moving doglegs – minimal displacement Dispersion through final compressor and moving doglegs – maximal displacement

  15. Characteristics of the 4GLS HACL Re-Entry Section R56 through final compressor and moving doglegs – minimal displacement R56 through final compressor and moving doglegs – maximal displacement

  16. R56 Through The 4GLS HACL Final Decompressor 156° arcs Moving doglegs XUV / HACL spreader 48° arc Have you spotted the deliberate mistake? Yes – the R56 at the end is not back to zero – I have not introduced enough in the final decompressor here!

  17. Characteristics of the 4GLS HACL Re-Entry Section β functions through final compressor and moving doglegs – minimal displacement β functions through final compressor and moving doglegs – maximal displacement

  18. A Modular Path Corrector For 4GLS HACL: Conclusion • We have presented a novel system to introduce a continuously variable path length difference without variation of longitudinal dispersion for ERLs • Modular design ensures independence from rest of machine • Length of section (12 m) fits into 4GLS design • Need to evaluate beam disruptive effects (e.g. CSR) on energy recovery process in start-to-end simulations • Thanks to Hywel Owen (DL) and Sergey Miginsky (BINP)

  19. A Modular Path Corrector For 4GLS: Summary • On re-entry to the main linac of 4GLS for deceleration we require: • The bunches to be π out of phase with respect to the accelerating bunches – introduce arbitrary path length of up to one RF wavelength • Any path length introduced to be independent of longitudinal dispersion • Decompression of short bunches to ensure small energy spread for energy recovery • The system to achieve this must fit in the existing 4GLS HACL design • We propose dedicated section with two parts, a final de-compressor chicane and girder-mounted moveable doglegs connected by expanding bellows • The dipoles in the chicane ramp slightly to compensate for arc-like R56 generated in the doglegs • The system is 12m long and would be placed just before re-entry to the 4GLS main linac

More Related