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Le Noa, Y.

Paper Title Page
MOPD026 Unsegmented vs. Segmented 4-Vane RFQ: Theory and Cold Model Experiments 735
 
  • A. France, O. Delferrière, M. Desmons, Y. Le Noa, J. Novo, O. Piquet
    CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette
 
 

The RF design of a RFQ should satisfied several conditions, namely: voltage profile required by beam dynamics, a tunable structure, RF stability and reasonable sensitivity to possible perturbations induced by power operation. Voltage profile may be obtained either by a dedicated profiling of 2D cross-section and/or slug tuner adjustment. Tunability is directly related to spatial distribution of tuners. RF stability requires sufficient separation between accelerating quadrupole mode and (i) adjacent quadrupole modes, or (ii) adjacent dipole modes. Quadrupole modes separation is directly related to RFQ length, and can be increased if necessary via segmentation; position of dipole modes spectrum w.r.t. quadrupole spectrum may be adjusted using rod stabilizers inserted at RFQ ends and on either side of coupling circuits. We present a thorough comparison of these two options for a 6-meter long structure at 352 MHz, and show they both lead to a tunable structure. The design includes 3D electromagnetic simulation and application of transmission line to tuning. The sensitivity of both designs to perturbations is also evaluated.