Paper |
Title |
Page |
MOP014 |
Cold Tests of SSR1 Resonators for PXIE |
112 |
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- A.I. Sukhanov, M.H. Awida, P. Berrutti, C.M. Ginsburg, T.N. Khabiboulline, O.S. Melnychuk, R.V. Pilipenko, Y.M. Pischalnikov, L. Ristori, A.M. Rowe, D.A. Sergatskov, V.P. Yakovlev
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
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Fermilab is currently building the Project X Injector experiment (PXIE). PXIE linac will accelerate 1 mA H− beam up to 30 MeV and serve as a testbed for validation of Project X concepts and mitigation of technical risks. A cryomodule of eight superconducting RF Single Spoke Resonators of type 1 (SSR1) cavities operating at 325 MHz is an integral part of PXIE. Ten SSR1 cavities were manufactured in industry and delivered to Fermilab. In this paper we discuss surface processing and tests of bare SSR1 cavities at the Fermilab Vertical Test Stand (VTS). We report on the measured performance parameters of nine cavities achieved during tests.
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MOP015 |
Status of the SRF Development for the Project X |
117 |
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- V.P. Yakovlev, T.T. Arkan, M.H. Awida, P. Berrutti, E. Borissov, A.C. Crawford, M.H. Foley, C.M. Ginsburg, I.V. Gonin, A. Grassellino, C.J. Grimm, S.D. Holmes, S. Kazakov, R.D. Kephart, T.N. Khabiboulline, V.A. Lebedev, A. Lunin, M. Merio, S. Nagaitsev, T.H. Nicol, Y.O. Orlov, D. Passarelli, T.J. Peterson, Y.M. Pischalnikov, O.V. Pronitchev, L. Ristori, A.M. Rowe, D.A. Sergatskov, N. Solyak, A.I. Sukhanov, I. Terechkine
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
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Project X is a high intensity proton facility being developed to support a world-leading program of Intensity Frontier physics over the next two decades at Fermilab. The proposed facility is based on the SRF technology and consists of two linacs: CW linac to accelerate beam from 2.1 MeV to 3 GeV and pulsed linac accelerate 5% of the beam up to 8 GeV. In a CW linac five families of SC cavities are used: half-wave resonators (162.5 MHz); single-spoke cavities: SSR1 and SSR2 (325 MHz) and elliptical 5-cell β=0.6 and β=0.9 cavities (650 MHz). Pulsed 3-8 GeV linac linac are based on 9-cell 1.3 GHz cavities. In the paper the basic requirements and the status of development of SC accelerating cavities, auxiliaries (couplers, tuners, etc.) and cryomodules are presented as well as technology challenges caused by their specifics.
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THP029 |
Simulation of Mechanical Resonances of SRF Cavities in Low Beam Current CW Operation |
962 |
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- N. Solyak, M.H. Awida, I.V. Gonin, T.N. Khabiboulline, Y.M. Pischalnikov, W. Schappert, V.P. Yakovlev
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
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The low beam current for CW operation of the Project X requires cavities to be mechanically optimized to operate at a high loaded Q and thus, low bandwidth with higher sensitivity to microphonics. The essential source of microphonics detuning is fluctuations in the helium pressure df/dp. Last year’s several methods for reducing df/dp has been proposed. One of the other possible sources of RF frequency instability is mechanical resonances. The cavity could be driven out of operating frequency by the mechanical deformations due to vibrations caused by external factors. In this paper we present the COMSOL multiphysics algorithm developed for evaluation of operating frequency shift due to mechanical resonances in SC cavities. We discuss the results of simulations for 5-cell elliptical 650 MHz β=0.9 cavities. The comparison of COMSOL simulations and measurements of ILC type cavities in Horizontal Test Stand at Fermilab is presented.
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THP080 |
SRF Cavity Tuning for Low Beam Loading |
1110 |
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- N. Solyak, E. Borissov, I.V. Gonin, C.J. Grimm, T.N. Khabiboulline, R.V. Pilipenko, Y.M. Pischalnikov, W. Schappert, V.P. Yakovlev
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
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The design of 5-cell elliptical 650 MHz β=0.9 cavities to accelerate H− beam of 1 mA average current in the range 467-3000 MeV for the Project X Linac is currently under development at Fermilab. The low beam current enables cavities to operate with high loaded Q’s and low bandwidth, making them very sensitive to microphonics. Mechanical vibrations and the Lorentz force can drive cavities off resonance during operation; therefore the proper design of the tuning system is very important part of cavity mechanical design. In this paper we review the design, performance, operation, reliability and cost of fast and slow tuners for 1.3 GHz elliptical cavities. We also present a design of the slow and fast tuners for 650 MHz β=0.9 cavities based on this experience. The HV in the new design is equipped with the tuners located at the end of the cavity instead of the initially proposed blade tuner located in the middle. We will present the results of ANSYS analyses of mechanical properties of tuners.
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