Author: Poddar, S.
Paper Title Page
MOPAB352 High Power Test of a Dielectric Disk Loaded Accelerator for a Two Beam Wakefield Accelerator 1096
 
  • B.T. Freemire, C.-J. Jing, S. Poddar
    Euclid Beamlabs, Bolingbrook, USA
  • M.E. Conde, D.S. Doran, G. Ha, W. Liu, J.G. Power, J.H. Shao, C. Whiteford, E.E. Wisniewski
    ANL, Lemont, Illinois, USA
  • M.M. Peng
    TUB, Beijing, People’s Republic of China
  • E.E. Wisniewski
    Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, USA
  • Y. Zhao
    Euclid TechLabs, Solon, Ohio, USA
 
  Funding: Small Business Innovation Research Contract No. DE-SC0019864 U.S. DOE Office of Science Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357
As part of the Ar­gonne 500 MeV short pulse Two Beam Wake­field Ac­cel­er­a­tion Demon­stra­tor, a sin­gle cell X-band di­elec­tric disk loaded ac­cel­er­a­tor (DDA) has been de­signed, fab­ri­cated, and tested at high power at the Ar­gonne Wake­field Ac­cel­er­a­tor. The DDA should pro­vide a short pulse (~20 ns) high gra­di­ent (>300 MV/m) ac­cel­er­a­tor while main­tain­ing a rea­son­able r/Q and high group ve­loc­ity. This will allow a sig­nif­i­cantly larger RF-to-beam ef­fi­ciency than is cur­rently pos­si­ble for con­ven­tional ac­cel­er­at­ing struc­tures. A low loss bar­ium ti­tan­tate ce­ramic, µr = 50, was se­lected, and a low tem­per­a­ture braz­ing alloy cho­sen to pre­serve the di­elec­tric prop­er­ties of the ce­ramic dur­ing braz­ing. High power test­ing pro­duced break­down at the triple junc­tion, re­sult­ing from the braze joint de­sign. No ev­i­dence of break­down was ob­served on the iris of the disk, in­di­cat­ing that the max­i­mum sur­face elec­tric field on the di­elec­tric was not reached. An im­proved braze joint has been de­signed and is in pro­duc­tion, with high power test­ing to fol­low.
 
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-MOPAB352  
About • paper received ※ 19 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 08 June 2021       issue date ※ 21 August 2021  
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WEPAB102 Half-Metal Spin Filter for Highly Polarized Emission from GaAs Photocathodes 2833
 
  • S. Poddar, C.-J. Jing, E.J. Montgomery
    Euclid Beamlabs, Bolingbrook, USA
  • P. Lukashev
    University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, Iowa, USA
  • C. Palmstrøm
    UCSB, Santa Barbara, California, USA
  • M.L. Stutzman, S. Zhang
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by Department of Energy grant number DE-SC0020564.
GaAs-based pho­to­cath­odes are one of the major sources of spin-po­lar­ized elec­trons and are cru­cial for the up­com­ing Elec­tron-Ion col­lider ex­per­i­ments which in­cludes study of pro­ton spin and spin par­ity vi­o­la­tion in the stan­dard model. The the­o­ret­i­cal po­lar­iza­tion limit in un­strained GaAs pho­to­cath­odes is 50 % but only 35 % is rou­tinely achieved in ex­per­i­ments. Spin se­lec­tive fil­ter­ing al­lows to boost the spin po­lar­iza­tion be­yond the 50 % the­o­ret­i­cal limit. In this work, first-prin­ci­ple elec­tronic cal­cu­la­tions using stan­dard Den­sity Func­tional The­ory are per­formed to pre­dict pos­si­ble Heusler alloy half-metal can­di­dates to be used as spin-fil­ter. Sim­u­la­tions are also per­formed to in­ves­ti­gate the half-metal­lic­ity as func­tion of the mag­netic spin di­rec­tion. Sev­eral de­vices are ex­per­i­men­tally fab­ri­cated using ded­i­cated Mol­e­c­u­lar Beam Epi­taxy growth sys­tem. We im­ple­mented Quan­tum Ef­fi­ciency and Po­lar­iza­tion test­ing of these half-metal/GaAs het­erostruc­tures using a ded­i­cated Mott po­larime­ter sys­tem. Pho­toe­mis­sion can also be seen on mag­net­i­cally switch­ing the spin-fil­ter di­rec­tion ac­com­pa­nied by a change in sign of the asym­me­try which is a qual­i­ta­tive proof of the spin-fil­ter­ing ef­fect.
 
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-WEPAB102  
About • paper received ※ 20 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 28 July 2021       issue date ※ 27 August 2021  
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WEPAB169 Towards Ultra-Smooth Alkali Antimonide Photocathode Epitaxy 3001
 
  • E.J. Montgomery
    Private Address, Bolingbrook, USA
  • O. Chubenko, G.S. Gevorkyan, S.S. Karkare, P. Saha
    Arizona State University, Tempe, USA
  • R.G. Hennig, J.T. Paul
    University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA
  • C. Jing, S. Poddar
    Euclid Beamlabs, Bolingbrook, USA
  • H.A. Padmore
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, under grant number DE-SC0020575.
Pho­to­cath­odes lead in bright­ness among elec­tron emit­ters, but trans­verse mo­menta are un­avoid­ably nonzero. Ul­tra-low trans­verse emit­tance would en­able brighter, higher en­ergy x-ray free-elec­tron lasers (FEL), im­proved col­lid­ers, and more co­her­ent, de­tailed ul­tra­fast elec­tron dif­frac­tion/mi­croscopy (UED/UEM). Al­though high quan­tum ef­fi­ciency (QE) is de­sired to avoid laser-in­duced non­lin­ear­i­ties, the state-of-the-art is 100 pC bunches from cop­per, 0.4 mm-mrad emit­tance. Ad­vances to­wards 0.1 mm-mrad re­quire ul­tra-low emit­tance, high QE, cryo-com­pat­i­ble ma­te­ri­als. We re­port ef­forts to­wards epi­tax­ial growth of ce­sium an­ti­monide on lat­tice matched sub­strates. DFT cal­cu­la­tions were per­formed to downs­e­lect from a list of can­di­date lat­tice matches. Co-evap­o­ra­tions achiev­ing >3% QE at 532 nm fol­lowed by atomic force and Kelvin probe mi­croscopy (AFM and KPFM) show ul­tra-low 313 pm rms (root mean square) phys­i­cal and 2.65 mV rms chem­i­cal rough­ness. We sim­u­late rough­ness-in­duced mean trans­verse en­ergy (MTE) to pre­dict <1 meV from rough­ness ef­fects at 10 MV/m in as-grown op­ti­cally thick cath­odes, promis­ing low emit­tance via epi­tax­ial growth.
 
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-WEPAB169  
About • paper received ※ 19 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 02 June 2021       issue date ※ 11 August 2021  
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THPAB142 Optical and Surface Characterization of Alkali-Antimonide Photocathodes 4037
 
  • P. Saha, O. Chubenko, G.S. Gevorkyan, A.H. Kachwala, S.S. Karkare, C.J. Knill
    Arizona State University, Tempe, USA
  • E.J. Montgomery, S. Poddar
    Euclid Beamlabs, Bolingbrook, USA
  • H.A. Padmore
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Al­kali-an­ti­monides, char­ac­ter­ized by high quan­tum ef­fi­ciency and low mean trans­verse en­ergy in vis­i­ble light, are ex­cel­lent elec­tron sources to drive x-ray free elec­tron lasers, elec­tron cool­ing and ul­tra­fast elec­tron dif­frac­tion ap­pli­ca­tions etc. Ex­ist­ing stud­ies of al­kali-an­ti­monides have fo­cused on quan­tum ef­fi­ciency and emit­tance, but in­for­ma­tion is lack­ing on the fun­da­men­tal as­pects of the elec­tronic struc­ture, such as the en­ergy gap of the semi­con­duc­tor and the den­sity of de­fects as well as the over­all nano-struc­ture of the ma­te­ri­als. We are, there­fore, con­duct­ing pho­to­con­duc­tiv­ity mea­sure­ments to mea­sure fun­da­men­tal semi­con­duc­tor prop­er­ties as well as using atomic force mi­cro­scope (AFM) and kelvin probe force mi­cro­scope (KPFM) to mea­sure the nanos­truc­ture vari­a­tions in struc­ture and sur­face po­ten­tial.  
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DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-THPAB142  
About • paper received ※ 16 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 14 July 2021       issue date ※ 13 August 2021  
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