Paper |
Title |
Page |
THP033 |
Study of Balloon Spoke Cavities |
972 |
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- Z.Y. Yao, R.E. Laxdal, B.S. Waraich, V. Zvyagintsev
TRIUMF, Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Vancouver, Canada
- R. Edinger
PAVAC, Richmond, B.C., Canada
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A balloon geometry has been proposed to suppress multipacting for single spoke resonators. The design may find a useful application for proton and ion accelerator projects. TRIUMF has completed initial RF, mechanical, and fabrication studies on this special geometry for both low (β=0.12) and medium (β=0.3) β geometries. The RF properties are comparable with that of traditional spoke cavities but with improved RF efficiency in addition to the reduced multipacting. The results of electro-magnetic and structural design studies comparing the balloon geometry with traditional spoke geometries will be presented. We will also present optimization studies of the mechanical design, such as decreasing df/dp by EM field compensation as well as discussing tuning strategies and fabrication techniques.
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THP035 |
Production of a 1.3 GHz Niobium 9-cell TRIUMF-PAVAC Cavity for the ARIEL Project |
978 |
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- V. Zvyagintsev, B. Amini, P.R. Harmer, P. Kolb, R.E. Laxdal, Y. Ma, B.S. Waraich, Z.Y. Yao
TRIUMF, Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Vancouver, Canada
- R. Edinger, M.C. Leustean, R. Singh
PAVAC, Richmond, B.C., Canada
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A nine-cell 1.3 GHz superconducting niobium cavity has been fabricated for the ARIEL project at TRIUMF. The cavity is intended to accelerate a beam current of 10 mA at an accelerating gradient of 10 MV/m. The beam loaded RF power of 100 kW is supplied through two opposed fundamental power couplers. The electromagnetic design was done by TRIUMF. The cavity final design and fabrication procedure have been developed in collaboration between TRIUMF and PAVAC Industries Inc. Several innovations in the cavity fabrication process were developed at PAVAC. Since the most important weld is at the equator this weld is done first to form a ‘smart-bell’ as the basic unit as opposed to welding first at the iris to form ‘dumb-bell’ units. Each half cell is pressed with a male die into a plastic forming surface to produce half-cells with less shape distortion and material dislocations. The cavity fabrication sequence including the frequency tuning steps and RF frequency modelling methods will be discussed.
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