Author: Posen, S.
Paper Title Page
MOPAB190 An 8 GeV Linac as the Booster Replacement in the Fermilab Power Upgrade 643
 
  • D.V. Neuffer, S.A. Belomestnykh, M. Checchin, D.E. Johnson, S. Posen, E. Pozdeyev, V.S. Pronskikh, N. Solyak, V.P. Yakovlev
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, USA
 
  Funding: This manuscript has been authored by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of High Energy Physics.
In­creas­ing the Main In­jec­tor (MI) beam power above ~1.2 MW re­quires re­place­ment of the 8 GeV Booster by a higher in­ten­sity al­ter­na­tive. Pre­vi­ously, rapid-cy­cling syn­chro­tron (RCS) and Linac so­lu­tions were con­sid­ered for this pur­pose. In this paper, we con­sider the Linac ver­sion that pro­duces 8 GeV H beam for in­jec­tion into the Re­cy­cler Ring (RR) or Main In­jec­tor (MI). The Linac takes ~1 GeV beam from the PIP-II Linac and ac­cel­er­ates it to ~2 GeV in a cw SRF linac, fol­lowed by a ~2-8 GeV pulsed linac using 1300 MHz cry­omod­ules. The linac com­po­nents in­cor­po­rate re­cent im­prove­ments in SRF tech­nol­ogy. The linac con­fig­u­ra­tion and beam dy­nam­ics re­quire­ments are pre­sented. In­jec­tion op­tions are dis­cussed. Re­search needed to im­ple­ment the Booster re­place­ment is de­scribed.
 
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-MOPAB190  
About • paper received ※ 15 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 28 May 2021       issue date ※ 10 August 2021  
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TUXC02
The LCLS-II-HE R&D Program: New Insights into Improving the Performance of Nitrogen-Doped SRF Cavities  
 
  • D. Gonnella, S. Aderhold, J.T. Maniscalco, M.C. Ross
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • D. Bafia, M. Checchin, A. Grassellino, S. Posen
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, USA
  • A.D. Palczewski, C.E. Reece
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
 
  Funding: US DOE and the LCLS-II-HE Project
Ni­tro­gen dop­ing has now been demon­strated to pro­duce SRF cav­i­ties of un­prece­dented Q0 val­ues when man­u­fac­tured in an in­dus­trial set­ting. LCLS-II has shown over 300 cav­i­ties with an av­er­age Q0 of more than 3·1010 at 16 MV/m and rep­re­sents an over­whelm­ing suc­cess of the dop­ing pro­to­col. LCLS-II-HE will add an ad­di­tional 23 su­per­con­duct­ing cry­omod­ules to the LCLS-II linac, re­quir­ing cav­i­ties to op­er­ate at sim­i­lar lev­els of high Q0 but at 21 MV/m in­stead of 16 MV/m. Ni­tro­gen-doped cav­i­ties have been his­tor­i­cally plagued by lower quench fields than other cav­ity prepa­ra­tion meth­ods. There­fore, an R&D ef­fort was launched to im­prove upon the quench fields of doped cav­i­ties while main­tain­ing the high Q0. Here we pre­sent re­sults on sin­gle-cells and 9-cells from new dop­ing recipe pur­suits, trans­fer of these new recipes to cav­ity ven­dors, and re­sults on ven­dor-pro­duced 9-cell cav­i­ties. This pro­gram has led to the dis­cov­ery of the im­por­tance of the cold elec­trop­o­l­ish for pro­duc­ing higher quench fields. Fi­nally, we will show re­sults from the first cry­omod­ule pro­duced with these new cav­i­ties op­er­at­ing at HE gra­di­ents.
 
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