Author: Sirtl, J.
Paper Title Page
MOPC129 Compact Solid State RF-Modules for Direct Drive RF-linacs 382
 
  • R. Irsigler, M. Back, R. Baumgartner, O. Heid, T.J.S. Hughes, M. Kaspar, T. Kluge, J. Sirtl, K. Weidner, M. Zerb
    Siemens AG, München, Germany
 
  We pre­sent a mod­u­lar RF power source con­cept based on solid state RF-mod­ules with novel SiC tran­sis­tors. The con­cept of­fers lower cost, bet­ter re­li­a­bil­i­ty and re­duced main­te­nance com­pared to tra­di­tion­al RF-source tech­nol­o­gy. No cir­cu­la­tors are re­quired, which makes the RF-mod­ule very com­pact and re­li­able. The SiC power tran­sis­tor has a very low input ca­pac­i­tance and was op­ti­mized for low gate re­sis­tance to en­able fast switch­ing in the VHF range. It de­liv­ers a max­i­mum pulsed drain sat­u­ra­tion cur­rent of 65 A. The tran­sis­tor pro­vides at 350 V sup­ply volt­age and 150 MHz an out­put power of 5,6 kW at a gain of 15,8 dB. It is es­sen­tial to avoid high par­a­sitic source in­duc­tances at RF and good ther­mal con­duc­tiv­i­ty is re­quired for op­er­a­tion at high duty cycle. We have built very com­pact 75 x 90 mm ce­ram­ic am­pli­fi­er mod­ules using a pla­nar in­ter­con­nect tech­nol­o­gy (SIPLIT) to con­nect the bare die tran­sis­tors to the DCB sub­strate. The mod­ules have a fully sym­met­ric push-pull topol­o­gy (cir­clotron) with four tran­sis­tors in par­al­lel in each leg. The RF-mod­ules de­liv­ered at 150 MHz an im­pres­sive RF out­put power in the range of 40 kW. Fur­ther tests at 324 MHz are planned and will be pre­sent­ed.  
 
MOPC152 Digital Control System for Solid State Direct Drive™ RF-Linacs 436
 
  • J. Sirtl, M. Back, T. Kluge
    Siemens AG, Erlangen, Germany
  • H. Schröder
    ASTRUM IT GmbH, Erlangen, Germany
 
  The Solid State Di­rect Drive™ con­cept for RF linacs has pre­vi­ous­ly been in­tro­duced*. Due to the dif­fer­ent method­ol­o­gy (i.e. solid state based rather than elec­tron tube based) as com­pared with con­ven­tion­al RF sources a new con­trol sys­tem is re­quired to de­liv­er the re­quired LLRF. To sup­port this new tech­nol­o­gy a fully dig­i­tal con­trol sys­tem for this new con­cept has been de­vel­oped. Pro­gress­es in Dig­i­tal – Ana­logue Con­vert­er tech­nol­o­gy and FPGA tech­nol­o­gy al­lows us to cre­ate a dig­i­tal Sys­tem which works in the 150 Mhz base­band. The com­plete func­tion­al­i­ty was im­ple­ment­ed in a Vir­tex 6 FPGA. Dis­pens­ing with the PLL al­lows an ex­cel­lent jit­ter-be­haviour. For this job, we use three 12 bit ADCs with a Sam­pling Rate of 1 GS/s and two 16 bit DACs (1 GS/s). The am­pli­tude of the RF source is con­trolled by di­vid­ing the RF mod­ules mount­ed on the power com­bin­er** into two groups and con­trol­ling the rel­a­tive phase of each group (in ef­fect mim­ick­ing an “out-phas­ing” am­pli­fi­er). This al­lows the mod­ules to be op­er­at­ed at their op­ti­mum work­ing point and al­lows a lin­ear am­pli­tude be­haviour.
* O. Heid, T. Hughes, Proc. of IPAC10, THPD002, p. 4278, Kyoto, Japan (2010).
** O. Heid, T. Hughes, Proc. of LINAC10, THPD068, Tsukuba, Japan.