Author: Wang, X.
Paper Title Page
TUCA02 Structural Dynamic Modelling and Measurement of SwissFEL Bunch Compressor 128
 
  • X. Wang, H. Jöhri, F. Löhl, M. Pedrozzi, T. Stapf
    PSI, Villigen PSI, Switzerland
 
  Magnetic chicanes are used in accelerator facilities to longitudinally compress the accelerated particle bunches. The second compression chicane (BC2) of SwissFEL consists of four dipole magnets bending the beam on the horizontal plane along a C-shaped orbit and has a total length of 17 m. The position of the two central dipoles can be continuously adjusted to achieve the required transverse offset in order to realize a wide range of compression schemes. To ensure the requires mechanical stability of the accelerator components sitting on the long and movable steel girder (7.7 m), it is essential to design a stiff support structure with high eigen frequencies. In the design stage, displacement frequency responses are calculated in a modal based linear dynamic analysis using finite element method to ensure vibration amplitude below 1 micrometer. Special considerations are given to the modelling of linear guide systems, as they introduce nonlinear support conditions and need to be adequately simplified in the calculation. After completing the BC2 assembly, vibration measurements were performed. Finally, the validation of the numerical model by measurement results will be presented.  
slides icon Slides TUCA02 [3.884 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-MEDSI2016-TUCA02  
About • paper received ※ 10 September 2016       paper accepted ※ 20 September 2016       issue date ※ 22 June 2017  
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WEPE37 Upgrade of the Super Advanced X-Ray Spectrometer (SAXES) of the RIXS Endstation for Better Resolution and Larger Detector Size 367
 
  • St. Maag, P. Hirschi, L. Nue, T. Schmitt, X. Wang
    PSI, Villigen PSI, Switzerland
 
  The RIXS endstation of ADRESS beamline at Swiss Light Source (SLS) is equipped with an ultrahigh resolution X-ray spectrometer. The spectrometer with a length of 5 m is installed on a rotating girder platform and allows varying scattering angles from 30° to 130°. The position of the CCD detector is longitudinally adjustable on the girder and vertically adjustable on a moving frame to allow an angle between 2° to 15° in the vertical plane. In the scope of a CCD camera upgrade, the modification of the vertical alignment of the guiding structure and ultra-high vacuum tanks became necessary. The new camera with a higher resolution and larger detector size weights around 25 kg. It is required to have a vibration amplitude well below 2 micrometer. We will present the critical design parameters of the upgrade, and the effort to increase bending stiffness of vacuum guide structure while keeping major geometry parameters. In addition, kinematic overdeterminacy was removed. After the upgrade we performed vibration measurements verifying that dynamic stability of the camera is improved, and design goal is reached. The site acceptance test confirmed the proper operation of the new mechanism.  
poster icon Poster WEPE37 [7.016 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-MEDSI2016-WEPE37  
About • paper received ※ 09 September 2016       paper accepted ※ 16 September 2016       issue date ※ 22 June 2017  
Export • reference for this paper using ※ BibTeX, ※ LaTeX, ※ Text/Word, ※ RIS, ※ EndNote (xml)