JACoW is a publisher in Geneva, Switzerland that publishes the proceedings of accelerator conferences held around the world by an international collaboration of editors.
@inproceedings{shao:ipac2022-froxsp2,
author = {J.H. Shao and H.B. Chen and D.S. Doran and G. Ha and C. Jing and C.-J. Jing and X. Lin and W. Liu and M.M. Peng and J.G. Power and J. Shi and C. Whiteford and E.E. Wisniewski and H. Zha},
% author = {J.H. Shao and H.B. Chen and D.S. Doran and G. Ha and C. Jing and C.-J. Jing and others},
% author = {J.H. Shao and others},
title = {{Demonstration of Gradient Above 300 MV/m in Short Pulse Regime Using an X-Band Single-Cell Structure}},
booktitle = {Proc. IPAC'22},
% booktitle = {Proc. 13th International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC'22)},
pages = {3134--3137},
eid = {FROXSP2},
language = {english},
keywords = {acceleration, experiment, accelerating-gradient, wakefield, electron},
venue = {Bangkok, Thailand},
series = {International Particle Accelerator Conference},
number = {13},
publisher = {JACoW Publishing, Geneva, Switzerland},
month = {07},
year = {2022},
issn = {2673-5490},
isbn = {978-3-95450-227-1},
doi = {10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-FROXSP2},
url = {https://jacow.org/ipac2022/papers/froxsp2.pdf},
abstract = {{High gradient acceleration is one of the critical technologies required by future linear colliders, free-electron lasers, and compact linac-based applications. Among decade long effort to break state-of-the-art gradient limitation of ~100 MV/m in normal conducting structures, using RF pulses shorter than 20 ns is a promising approach based on theoretic analysis and experimental observation. In this study, we demonstrated high gradient above 300 MV/m using an X-band 11.7 GHz single-cell travelling-wave structure with 6 ns FWHM RF pulses generated by a power extractor. In comparison, a scaled 11.424 GHz structure only reached below 150 MV/m driven by 30-100 ns RF pulses from a klystron with pulse compression. The experimental results and the suggested new mechanism of beam acceleration in the Breakdown Insensitive Acceleration Regime (BIAR) are presented in this manuscript.}},
}