Paper | Title | Page |
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WE6RFP055 | The Argonne Wakefield Accelerator Facility (AWA): Upgrades and Future Experiments | 2923 |
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Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. The Argonne Wakefield Accelerator Facility is dedicated to the study of advanced accelerator concepts based on electron beam driven wakefield acceleration and RF power generation. The facility employs an L-band photocathode RF gun to generate high charge short electron bunches, which are used to drive wakefields in dielectric loaded structures as well as in metallic structures (iris loaded, photonic band gap, etc). Accelerating gradients as high as 100 MV/m have been reached in dielectric loaded structures, and RF pulses of up to 44 MW have been generated at 7.8 GHz. In order to reach higher accelerating gradients, and also be able to generate higher RF power levels, a photocathode with higher quantum efficiency is needed. Therefore, a new RF gun with a Cesium Telluride photocathode will replace the electron gun that has been used to generate the drive bunches. In addition to this, a new L-band klystron will be added to the facility, increasing the beam energy from 15 MeV to 23 MeV, and thus increasing the total power in the drive beam to a few GW. The goal of future experiments is to reach accelerating gradients of several hundred MV/m and to extract RF pulses with GW power level. |
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WE6RFP060 | A 26 GHz Dielectric Based Wakefield Power Extractor | 2930 |
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Funding: DoE SBIR 2008 Phase II, DE-FG02-07ER84821 High frequency, high power rf sources are needed for many applications in particle accelerators, communications, radar, etc. We have developed a 26GHz high power rf source based on the extraction of wakefields from a relativistic electron beam. The extractor is designed to couple out rf power generated from a high charge electron bunch train traversing a dielectric loaded waveguide. Using a 20nC bunch train (bunch length of 1.5 mm) at the Argonne Wakefield Accelerator (AWA) facility, we expect to obtain a steady 26GHz output power of 148 MW. The extractor has been fabricated and bench tested along with a 26GHz Power detector. The first high power beam experiments should be performed prior to the Conference. Detailed results will be reported. |
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WE6RFP061 | A Transverse Mode Damped DLA Structure | 2933 |
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Funding: DoE SBIR Phase I 2008 As the dimensions of accelerating structures become smaller and beam intensities higher, the transverse wakefields driven by the beam become quite large with even a slight misalignment of the beam from the geometric axis. These deflection modes can cause inter-bunch beam breakup and intra-bunch head-tail instabilities along the beam path, and thus BBU control becomes a critical issue. All new metal based accelerating structures, like the accelerating structures developed at SLAC or power extractors at CLIC, have designs in which the transverse modes are heavily damped. Similarly, minimizing the transverse wakefield modes (here the HEMmn hybrid modes in Dielectric-Loaded Accelerating (DLA) structures) is also very critical for developing dielectric based high energy accelerators. We have developed a 7.8GHz transverse mode damped DLA structure. The design and bench test results are presented in the article. |
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WE6RFP087 | Development and Testing of X-Band Dielectric-Loaded Accelerating Structures | 3001 |
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Funding: Department of Energy, Office of Naval Research, and DoE SBIR Phase II grant DE-FG02-06ER84463 Dielectric-loaded accelerating (DLA) structures, in which a dielectric liner is placed inside a cylindrical metal tube, offer the potential of a simple, inexpensive alternative to copper disk-loaded structures for use in high-gradient rf linear accelerators. A joint Naval Research Laboratory/Euclid Techlabs/Argonne National Laboratory study is under way to investigate the performance of X-band DLA structures using high-power 11.43-GHz radiation from the NRL Magnicon Facility*. The initial goal of the program has been to develop structures capable of sustaining high accelerating gradients. The two significant limitations that have been discovered relate to multipactor loading of the structures and rf breakdown at joints between ceramic sections. We will report the results of several recent structure tests that have demonstrated significant progress in addressing both of these issues. The longer-range goal of the program is to study electron acceleration in DLA structures. For this purpose, we are developing an X-band DLA test accelerator. We will also report the results of initial operation of a 5-MeV injector for the new accelerator. *C. Jing, W. Gai, J. Power, R. Konecny, S. Gold, W. Liu and A. Kinkead, IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci., vol. 33, pp.1155-1160, August 2005. |