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Accelerator Laboratory: RF ACCELERATING STRUCTURES Summary • Introduction • Standing Wave Structures (Resonant cavities) • Travelling Wave Structures (Iris loaded waveguides) • Lab Experimental activity Characterization of an Aluminum model of the S-band RF GUN for the ELINP project Characterization of an Aluminum model of the S-band RF deflector for the CTF3 project The LNF RF Team: D. Alesini, M. Bellaveglia, F. Cardelli, A. Gallo, A.Mostacci, L. Piersanti RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Fundamental relations of the relativistic dynamics Rest Energy W0 m0 c Relativistic -factor 2 v c, 1 always ! Relativistic -factor Total Energy Wk W W0 1 1 2 1 always ! m m0 Kinetic Energy W m0c 2 W0 W 2 W02 p 2c 2 ( 1)m0c 2 1 m0 v 2 se 1 2 Newton’s 2nd Law Lorentz Force d d F p (mv ) dt dt F q (E v B) RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Energy-velocity plot Velocity variations are negligible at energies well above the particle rest energy! β= v/c Wk[MeV] e- relativistic (v c) at W>1MeV (W0=511keV) p relativistic at W>1000 MeV (W0=938MeV) RF Crew Leptons (light particles) are pratically fully relativistic in any existing dedicated accelerators (Wk>>W0, with the exception of the very first acceleration stage) while protons and ions are typically weakly relativistic (Wk<W0 – but not always, see high energy hadron colliders such as the LHC). For leptons the accelerating process occurs at constant particle velocity (v ≈ c), while protons and ions velocity may change a lot during acceleration. This implies major important differences in the technical characteristics of the dedicated accelerating structures. Particle energies are typically expressed in electron-volt [eV], equal to the energy gained by 1 electron accelerated through an electrostatic potential of 1 volt: 1 eV=1.6x10-19 J RF Accelerating Structures Fundamental equation of the particle motion dp q EvB dt ACCELERATION Longitudinal Dynamics p momentum m mass v velocity q charge BENDING AND FOCUSSING Transverse Dynamics B magnetic field E electric field Electric field Deflection (magnetic field) Beam RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures From Electrostatic to RF acceleration The first historical particle accelerator was built by the Nobel prize Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen. It consisted in a vacuum tube containing a cathode connected to the negative pole of a DC voltage generator. Electrons emitted by the heated cathode were accelerated while flowing to another electrode connected to the positive generator pole (anode). Collisions between energetic electrons and anode produced X-rays. The energy gained by the electrons travelling from cathode to anode is equal to their charge multiplied the electrostatic potential difference between the two electrodes. X cathode anode e- + PRINCIPLE: The DC voltage of a generator is used to accelerate particles dp qE dt W qV RF Crew Basic limitation: the energy gain ∆W=q∆V is proportional to the DC voltage ∆V which is limited by unavoidable breakdown phenomena! RF Accelerating Structures To increase the achievable maximum energy Van de Graaff invented an electrostatic generator based on a dielectric belt transporting positive charges to an isolated electrode hosting an ion source. The positive ions generated in a large positive potential were accelerated toward ground by the static electric field. DC voltage as large as 15 MV can be obtained (E ~ 15MeV) APPLICATIONS Still ~ 350 Van De Graaff are in operation worldwide, typically at V<25MV, I<100mA. They are used for: Material analysis: such as Semiconductors structure analysis, X-ray production, …; Material modification: ion implantation for semiconductors RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures RF Acceleration : the Wideröe “Drift Tube LINAC” (DTL) Basic idea: The particles produced by a accelerated by the electric gap between electrodes alternatively to the poles generator. filament are field in the connected of an AC If the length of the tubes increases with the particle velocity during the acceleration such that the time of flight is kept constant and equal to half of the RF period , the particles are subject to a synchronous accelerating voltage and experience an energy gain of ∆W=q∆V at each gap crossing. The original idea of Ising (1924) was implemented by Wideroe (1927) who applied a sine-wave voltage to a sequence of drift tubes. The particles do not experience any force while travelling inside the tubes (equipotential regions) and are accelerated across the gaps. This kind of structure is called Drift Tube LINAC (DTL). gap In principle a single AC voltage can be used to indefinitely accelerate a beam, avoiding the breakdown limitation affecting the electrostatic accelerators. Please notice that this technique requires bunched beams, i.e. in order to be synchronous with the external AC field, particles have to be gathered in non-uniform temporal structures RF Crew In 1928 Wideröe by means of 3 tubes (2 gaps) accelerated Na e K ions at 50 keV with an RF of 25 kV and 1 MHz. In 1931 Sloan e Lawrence used 30 tubes to accelerate Hg ions to the energy of 1.25 MeV with an RF of 42 kV e 10 MHz; in 1934, by using 36 tubes and a higher RF voltage, they got to 2.8 MeV. RF Accelerating Structures : Beam -to-accelerating field synchronization The Wideröe DTL provides synchronization between a charge particle in motion and an accelerating E-field. If particles enter the LINAC with an energy Win, while travelling inside the n-th drift tube they will show energy Wn and velocity vn given by: Wn Win nqVkick n2 1 ; vn c n n Wn Ln TRF vn 2 Ln The length of the n-th drift tube has to be W0 1 Wn W0 2 1 1 vnTRF n RF 2 2 The condition Ln<<RF (necessary to model the tube as an equipotential region) requires <<1. The Wideröe technique can not be applied to relativistic particles RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Standing Wave (SW) Accelerating Structures: Resonant Cavities High frequency accelerating fields synchronized with the beam motion are obtained by exciting metallic structures properly designed. In this case the structure physical dimensions are comparable with the e.m. field wavelength, and the actual spatial and temporal field profiles have to be computed (analytically or numerically) by solving the Maxwell equations with the proper boundary conditions. Electric field beam Resonant cavities are (almost) closed volumes were the e.m fields can only exists in the form of particular spatial conformations (resonant modes) whose components, including the accelerating field Ez, rigidly oscillate at some specific frequencies characteristic of the mode (Standing Waves). The accelerating field along the beam path has the following form: Ez (z,t) Eˆ z (z) cos(t ) RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Resonant Cavity Shapes Resonant cavities are (almost) closed volumes /4 were the e.m fields can only exists in the form of particular spatial conformations (resonant modes) rigidly oscillating at some characteristics frequencies (Standing Waves). Reentrant or nose-cone cavities /2 Disk-loaded or coaxial cavities Pill-box or cylindrical cavities RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Resonant Cavity Examples Cylindrical Cavity or Pill Box (TM010 Mode) Coaxial Cavities (TEM Mode) Er E Hr Hz 0 Ez (r) E0 J0 ( p01r / a) H (r) j E J ( p r / a) 0 1 01 /4 resonators Pill-box like (or bell-shape) RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Voltage Current /2 resonator Acceleration with SW cavities Let’s compute the energy gain W for a charge q crossing the gap of an accelerating cavity at an almost constant velocity v. Let’s also consider a symmetric cavity profile. We may write: z q vt ; E z (r 0, z , t ) Eˆ z ( z ) cos( t ) The Energy gain is obtained integrating the accelerating field sampled by the charge along the trajectory, and may be expressed as: L/2 L/2 L / 2 L / 2 W qE z (r 0, z, t z / v)dz qEˆ z ( z ) cos(z / v )dz cos( ) field long.symmetry sin( ) is an odd function L/2 qEˆ ( z) cos(z / v)dz z L / 2 For symmetric field profiles the maximum integrated accelerating voltage V is obtained when the relative phase between field and particle is 0 . For asymmetric field profiles the maximum accelerating voltage is obtained at values 0 , and it may be easily demonstrated that: L/2 V Eˆ ( z ) e z j z v dz L / 2 RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Cavity dissipation – Q factor Real cavities are lossy. Surface currents dissipate energy, so that a certain amount of RF power must be provided from the outside to keep the accelerating field at the desired level. If the external excitation is turned off, fields inside the cavity decay exponentially with a time constant n characteristic of any given mode. In frequency domain, the dissipation makes the modes resonating not only at the mode natural frequency width n around n . n Both the bandwidth time n are related to the quality factor Q n but in a frequency band of Q n Vmax Pgen and the decay of the mode defined as: n 2Q / n U P n 3 dB n Q where U and P are the e.m. energy stored in the mode and the corresponding power dissipation on the walls. General expressions for U and P are: 1 2 1 2 U E H d ; 4 4 Vol RF Crew P 0 1 1 2 Rs H tan d with Rs 2 Surf . 2 conductivity skin depth RF Accelerating Structures Frequency and material conductivity Shunt impedance One of the most important parameter to characterize the cavity accelerating modes is the shunt impedance R 2 V 1 R 2P Rs defined as: E z ( z ) e dz 2 H d tan Surf . j z / v 2 Mode field configuration The shunt impedance is the parameter that qualifies the efficiency of an accelerating mode. The highest the value of R , the larger the attainable accelerating voltage for a given power expenditure. Another very useful parameter is the ratio between shunt impedance R and quality factor Q : 2 P 1 R V Q 2 P U 2 2 Ez ( z) e traject . j z / v dz 1 2 1 2 Vol. 4 E 4 H d R Q is a pure geometric qualification factor. In fact, for a given mode it is straightforward that the R Q does not depend on the cavity wall conductivity, and its value is preserved if homothetic The expansions of a given geometry are considered. The R Q is a qualification parameter of the cavity geometrical design. RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Modes of a Resonant Cavity: General Problem The resonant cavity modes are solutions of the homogeneous Maxwell equations inside closed volumes surrounded by perfectly conducting walls. Homogeneous Maxwell Equations (wave equation) + perfect metallic boundaries The mathematical problem has the following formal expression: 2 2 Wave equation E (r , t ) 2 E (r , t ) t n E (r , t ) 0 Phasors Perfect boundary Field solenoidal ity E (r , t ) 0 2 E (r ) k 2 E (r ) n E ( r ) 0 E (r ) 0 According to the theory of linear operators, the solution is represented by a discrete set of eigen-functions E n (r ) and their associated eigenvalues k n n c . The magnetic field eigenfunctions Bn (r ) can be obtained from the B E n (r ) j n Bn (r ) Maxwell 3rd equation: E t phasors The functions E n (r ) are the cavity modes, each one resonating at a certain specific frequency n . The eigen functions are also a linear independent base, so that the actual fields E ( r , t ) , B ( r , t ) can always be represented as a j t j t linear superposition of the cavity modes: E ( r , t ) a n E n ( r ) e n ; B ( r , t ) a n Bn ( r ) e n n n RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Analytical field solutions: the Pill-box cavity In the simplest cases the mode field configuration can be calculated analytically, while in almost all practical cases the solutions are computed numerically by means of dedicated computer codes. One of the most interesting didactical case is the cylindrical or “pill-box” cavity. The pill-box cavity can be seen as a piece of circular waveguide short-circuited at both ends by metallic plates. Wave Type TM01 TM02 TM11 TE01 TE11 Circular waveguide modes RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Numerical Solutions In the majority of cases analytical field solutions are not available and numerical methods are applied. There are various codes dedicated to the solution of the Maxwell equations in closed and/or open volumes starting from a discretized model of the structure under study. Codes can be classified in various ways: 2D (2-dimensionals) and 3D (3-dimensionals) codes; Finite differences and finite elements codes; Time-domain and frequency domain codes. RF Crew Grid E Dual grid H RF Accelerating Structures Figure of merit of a SW cavity DEFINITION PARAMETER Q-factor Ratio between energy stored in the cavity and energy dissipated in one cycle. It is also an indicator of the resonance bandwidth. 1 4 Vol 2 1 4 2 2f ris ; U E H dV ; P 1 2 2 Rs H tan dS ; Rs 2 Sup 0 Shunt Impedance R Maximum accelerating voltage for a given dissipated RF power. Shunt Impedance per unit length Z Maximum accelerating voltage for a given dissipated RF power a per unit length. Geometric factor R/Q Geometric factor qualifying the accelerating cavity shape regardless to frequency and wall conductivity. RF Crew Q U P V2 R 2P Z R V2 2 L 2 PL V2 V2 R Q 2 PQ 2U FREQUENCY SCALING Q 1 R f 1 2 s R 1 f 1 2 1 f12 Rs L Z R Rs Q RF Accelerating Structures f 0!!! Input-Output coupling Real cavities are never completely closed volumes. At the least, apertures for beam transit (beam tubes) are required, as well as RF input couplers to feed the cavity, and RF output couplers to probe the field inside. The RF couplers can be of different types: Magnetic (loop) input coupler Waveguide (slot) input coupler RF Crew Electric couplers (Antennas): the inner of a coaxial line connected from the outside couples to the cavity mode E-field; Magnetic couplers (Loops): the cavity mode B-field couples to a loop connecting inner and outer conductors of a coaxial line. Waveguide couplers: the cavity mode fields are coupled to an external waveguide of proper shape and cut-off through a hole or a slot in the cavity walls RF Accelerating Structures Coupling and loading parameters of a cavity The coupling strength of a port can be measured as the amount of power Pout extracted from the cavity through the port itself for a given level of the mode fields inside. This leads to the definitions of the externalQ ( Qext ) (in analogy with the definition of the resonance quality factor Q ) and coupling coefficient of a coupler according to : Qext U ; Pout Q0 P out Qext Pwalls where Q0 is the quality factor of the resonant mode, related only to the dissipation Pwalls on the cavity walls. The extra-power flow through the cavity couplers, in addition to the power loss in the walls, may significantly change the characteristics of the resonance. This effect is known as “cavity loading”. The loaded cavity Q-factor QL is lowered by the power coupled out through the cavity ports and results to be: QL U PTot U Pwalls Poutn Poutn 1 n Pwalls 1 1 1 QL U U Q0 Qext n Q0 It can be easily demonstrated that, provided that all the monitor ports are weakly coupled (βn<<1), the input coupling of a cavity is related to the input reflection coefficient ρ by: RF Crew in Q0 1 Qextin 1 RF Accelerating Structures Tuning The cavity resonant frequencies need to be continuously controlled during operation. Actual frequencies are affected by thermal drifts and, in case of superconducting cavities, by pressure variations in the cryogenic bath. Storage ring cavities have to be largely detuned during beam injection and beam coasting to compensate for beam loading variations. The frequency control is normally obtained through small deformations of the cavity boundaries. The Slater theorem can be used to compute the resonant frequency change, according to: H H 2 V 2 0 V E 2 d E 2 d U H U E U Cavity tuning is normally actuated through: Cooling fluid temperature control (linac TW or SW sections); Structure pushing/stretching by application of axial forces (SC and multi-cell cavities); Variable penetration of tuning plungers in the cavities volume (room-temperature, single cell cavities under heavy beam-loading). RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Perturbations The Slater theorem can be used also to measure the field profiles in the cavity by inserting a perturbing object and measuring the frequency shifts while moving it along selected paths. The theorem mathematical expression is different in this case and form factors need to be introduced because field lines are strongly deformed in this case, while they are almost unperturbed when the boundary is slightly deformed (tuning case). 0 1 4U k V B|| B||2 k B B2 k E E||2 k E E2 d It turns out that if the perturbing object is a perfectly conducting sphere the values of the form factors are: || k E|| k E 3 ; k B|| k B 3 2 If a sphere of radius a is moved along the beam axis of a cavity, the E field profile and the R/Q of a resonant accelerating mode can be estimated according to: E2 U ; 3 0 a R 1 Q 2 0 a 3 2 0 s ( z ) e j0 z / c dz z sign of the E-field profile RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Multi-cell Cavities Multi-cell resonant cavities are very effective in reducing the number of RF power sources and input couplers. The N-cell structure behaves like a system composed by N oscillators coupled together. According to the theory of coupled oscillators, each single-cell mode degenerates in a set of N possible coupled oscillation modes of the whole system, characterized by a cell-to-cell phase advance given by: n n N 1 n 0,1, ..., N 1. SW multi-cell cavities are designed to use the last mode ( N 1 ) for acceleration. Provided that Lcell 2 the beam and the RF are in-phase all along the structures, which brings to: R N Rcell ; RF Crew Q Qcell RF Accelerating Structures RF Superconductivity Superconductivity is a very well-known physical phenomenon that is widely used in RF for particle accelerators. Surface resistance is reduced by orders of magnitude (5 typically) in superconducting (SC) cavities, which are then very suitable when large gradients have to be sustained continuously or in a high duty-cycle regime. RBCS vs. T (Log scale) RBCS vs. f (Log-Log) Surface resistance John Bardeen, Leon Neil Cooper and John Robert Schrieffer (BCS) , 1957. RF Crew 1.3 GHz, 2-cell cavity for Cornell ERL injector. RF Accelerating Structures Examples of multi-cell cavity: the TESLA / ILC cavity In the last 25 years superconducting cavities have become technological masterpieces providing incomparable performances. Superconductivity applied to RF resonant cavities allows gaining about 5 orders of magnitude in Q factors! A noticeable example is the 9-cells, 1.3 GHz cavity originally designed for the DESY TeV linear collider proposal TESLA, and presently adopted as the baseline for existing (FLASH , XFEL DESY), and future (International Linear Collider - ILC) projects. The most widely used material for superconducting RF is Niobium (Nb), usually bulk but also as film on a metallic substrate. Lead (Pb) is also used. The SC cavity geometries have to be very simple and smooth, since any tip or corner is a potential site for local hot spots which may cause quenches (i.e. loss of the superconducting status of the material). Moreover, the whole internal surface of the structure must be easily accessible to allow effective cleaning and polishing treatments. RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Traveling Wave (TW) Accelerating Structures Particle beams can be accelerated not only by standing waves but also by traveling waves. In this case it is necessary to let an e.m. wave with non-zero longitudinal electric field travel together with the beam in a special guide in which the wave phase velocity matches the particle velocity. If this is the case the beam absorbs energy from the wave and it is continuously accelerated. Constant cross-section waveguides By solving the wave (Helmholtz) equation it turns out that an e.m. wave propagating in a constant cross section guide will never be synchronous with a particle beam since the propagation speed (i.e. the wave phase velocity) is always larger than the speed of light c. Let’s consider for instance the first mode (TM01) with a non zero longitudinal electric field of a circular waveguide . The accelerating field at a given frequency has the following expression: propagation constant phase velocity RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures The wave phase velocity and the propagation constant are simply related by: while, solving the wave equation, the propagation constant and the phase velocity result to be functions of the frequency according to: specific of the guide geometry and of the selected mode As already mentioned the wave phase velocity is always larger than c, so that the accelerating field and the particles in the beam can never be synchronous. Please notice that the phase velocity is not the energy propagation velocity of the structure. In fact the energy propagates with the group velocity given by: RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures The vs. plot is called dispersion curve of the waveguide. Noticeable aspects are: Dispersion plot a) the tangent of the ph angle is the wave phase velocity at the operating frequency ; b) the propagation constant is real (propagating mode ) only if > c ( c = cut-off frequency of the selected mode); * c) if < c the mode does not propagate in the structure; d) the tangent of the g is the wave group velocity in the structure. In constant cross section waveguide, phase and group velocities have the same sign (forward waves), but this is not true in general since in some peculiar guides (like periodical iris loaded structures) they may have opposite signs (backward waves); e) The plot for negative corresponds to waves propagating in opposite direction (towards negative z). RF Crew * Constant cross section waveguides: c k 2 RF Accelerating Structures 2 t Periodic structures In order to slow-down the wave phase velocity, irisloaded periodic structure are used. According to the Floquet theorem, the field in this kind of structures is that of a special wave travelling within a spatial periodic profile, with the same spatial period D of the structure. The periodic field profile can be Fourier expanded in a series of traveling waves (spatial harmonics) with different phase velocity according to: z a) b) c) d) e) A typical dispersion curve of an iris loaded structure has the following characteristics: the plot is periodic respect to the variable , and the period is 2/D; each period is the dispersion curve of a different spatial harmonic; the geometry of the guide can be designed such that the fundamental spatial harmonic E0 is synchronous with the beam (i.e. phase velocity = beam particle velocity) for a selected operating frequency *; the high-order harmonics (n=1,2,3,...) are asynchronous respect to the beam, so they do not contribute to the acceleration; periodic structures can only operate in limited frequency bands (stopbands associated with periodicity, as in other physics process ...) RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Merit Figures of a periodic structure Traveling wave (TW) accelerating structures are typically qualified by the following merit figures : a) Shunt impedance per unit length Z: It is defined as the ratio between the squared amplitude of the fundamental harmonic accelerating field (E0) and the power dissipated per unit length in the structure (dP/dz): 2 𝐸0 𝑍= ÷ 𝜔1 𝑑𝑃 𝑑𝑧 2 ; 𝑍 = Ω/𝑚 The higher the Z value, the higher the available accelerating field for a given RF power dissipation per unit length; b) Q factor per unit length: It is defined as the ratio between the stored energy per unit length (w) the power dissipated per unit length (dP/dz), times the operating frequency *: 𝑄= 𝜔∗ 𝑤 ÷ 𝜔 −1 𝑑𝑃 𝑑𝑧 RF Crew 2 ; 𝑄 = 𝑑𝑖𝑚𝑒𝑛𝑠𝑖𝑜𝑛𝑙𝑒𝑠𝑠 RF Accelerating Structures c) Z/Q ratio: From previous definitions it turns out: Similarly to the SW structures, this parameter only depends on the structure design, which means that it is independent on the conductivity of the structure inner surface. Since for a given E0 value the stored energy per unit length w is inversely proportional to 2 (for homotetic scaling of the dimensions): and since the operating frequency * is inversely proportional to the dimension scaling factor, the Z/Q factor, differently from the SW case, results to grow linearly with frequency. d) Group velocity vg: The group velocity is defined as: and it represents the velocity of the energy flow in the structure. It may be demonstrated that the group velocity approximately scales with a and b dimensions according to: RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures The group velocity vg is a very important qualifying parameter of a TW structure. The filling time f, i.e. the time necessary to propagate an RF wavefront from the input to the end of a TW accelerating section of length L is given by: High group velocities allow reducing the duration of the RF pulse feeding the structure. However, the RF power P flowing through the structure (P = flux of the Poynting vector) and the stored energy per unit length w are related by: and since E0 is proportional to the square root of w, clearly a low group velocity is preferable to increase the effective accelerating field for a given power flowing in the structure. e) Frequency *. Since: To increase Z the operating design frequency must be the highest possible. However, the power available from ordinary RF power sources at high frequencies decreases rapidly with frequency. Also RF power density on the structure surface increases and the irises diameter decrease linearly with frequency, so problems related with heating increase and beam stay clear reduction at high frequencies have to be taken into account. RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures f) attenuation:. Because of the wall dissipation, the RF power flux decreases along the structure according to the following equation: where is the structure attenuation coefficient. It may be shown that: 𝑑𝑃 = −𝛼𝑃 𝑑𝑧 𝜔 𝛼= ÷ 𝜔3 𝑄𝑣𝑔 2 In a purely periodic guide, made by a sequence of identical cells (also called “constant impedance structure”), does not depend on z and both the RF power flux and the intensity of the accelerating field decay exponentially along the structure : 𝑃 𝑧 = 𝑃𝑖𝑛 𝑒 −𝛼𝑧 ; 𝐸0 𝑧 = 𝐸0𝑖𝑛 𝑒 −𝛼𝑧 2 It is possible to design structures with nearly constant accelerating field along z . The diameter of the cell irises has to be gradually reduced, reducing the group velocity along the structure in order to keep nearly constant the energy stored per unit length w and power dissipated per unit length dP/dz . These are called “constant gradient structures”, and are not exactly periodic. g) Working mode: It is defined as the phase advance of the fundamental harmonic over a period D: For practical reasons related to the experimental measurement of the dispersion curve of actual devices, the working modes are typically designed to be: RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Examples of TW structure: the Stanford LINAC (SLAC) This is the most widely diffused TW iris-loaded accelerating structure, developed at the "Stanford Linear Accelerator Center" (SLAC). It works in S-band (f=2856 MHz) and it is composed by 86 accelerating cells working in 2/3 mode. It has been produced in various types ("constant impedance" and "constant gradient") and generations, and tested and operated up to 30 MV/m and beyond. L≈3m RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures EDIT 2015 – Accelerator Lab RF Measurements • Instrumentation Description • Experience #1: characterization of a SW cavity (S-band RF Gun) • Experience #2: characterization of a TW structure (S-band RF deflector) RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures VNA conceptual scheme: the 4 blocks 1 Source 2 Signal Separation Incident Reflected 3 Z0 LOAD DUT Transmitted Detector and Receiver 4 RF Crew Process and Display A Vector Network Analyzer measures the scattering matrix elements sij – i.e. Input/output matching and forward/backward transfer function – of a Device Under Test. An internal sine-wave sorce is made sweeping a given frequancy span and reflected and transmitted signas are measuerd and normalized to the source. The direction of the excitation can be inverted. RF Accelerating Structures Network Analyzer Block Diagram Incident Transmitted DUT SOURCE Reflected SIGNAL SEPARATION INCIDENT (R) REFLECTED (A) TRANSMITTED (B) RECEIVER / DETECTOR PROCESSOR / DISPLAY RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Spectrum Analyzer Block Diagram A Spectrum Analyzer characterizes signals in frequency domain. An internal source sweeps a selected frequency range to downconvert and filter the input signal. The IF filter output power reveals the spectral content of the signal at the instantaneous frequency scanned by the instrument. RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Digital Oscilloscopes A Digital Oscilloscope characterizes signals in time domain. The input signal is buffered by a front-end amplifier and then A-to-D converted. Instrument BW and resolution depend essentially by the characteristics of the front-end ADC . Digital data stream is stored, processed and displayed according to experimental needs. Special algorithms working on the acquired samples allow smart triggering of the instrument. RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Experience #1: ELI-NP S-band RF-Gun Design value (Cu) Meas. value (Al) Working frequency 2.856 (GHz) ? Working mode π ? Unloaded Q 14500 ? Parameter Input coupling coeff. (ß) 3 ? Input external Q 4800 ? Filling time 420 ns ? Shunt impedance (R) 1.7 MΩ ? R/Q factor 117 Ω ? Repetition rate 100 Hz X Max RF input power 16 MW X Peak field at cathode 120 MV/m X RF Crew cathode bead ½ cell cell beam pipe RF Accelerating Structures Experience #1: RF characterization of an Aluminum model of the ELI-NP S-band RF-Gun • f0, fπ, ∆f, QL, Q0, ß measurement with Network Analizer • Longitudinal electric field profile measurement with “bead-drop” technique (mode π): − Ticks drawn on the fishing line are equally spaced every 5 mm − Fill an excel spreadsheet with 2 columns: bead position (z) and fres − Calculate and plot ∆f/f vs z; • Longitudinal electric field profile measurement with “bead-drop” technique (mode 0): − Same as mode π… but centered at f0 • Shunt impedance (or R/Q) calculation: − From the same spreadsheet, calculate Vacc and then use the formula for R (or R/Q); • Filling time measurement (time domain with realistic RF pulse) RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Travelling Wave structure The Aluminum model of the CTF3 combiner ring RF deflector accelerating cell nom. Energy En [MeV] 184 max. Energy Emax [MeV] 350 frequency f [MHz] number of cells N c 2998.55 10 2π/3 De-phasing/cell total length L [cm] group velocity v g / c 33 -.0244 phase velocity v ph / c filling time F0 Deflection 1 [ns] Shunt impedance Rs (E ) [mrad] max RF Power PRF [MW] beam pipe RF power couplers 46 2 2PRF [MΩ] 0.19 5 8 Dispersion curve RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures Experience #2: RF Travelling Wave structure • Example of a disassembled C-band TW structure; • BW measurement at fRF=3 GHz with Network Analizer; • Filling time measurement #1: • Using a realistic pulse from RF signal generator (fRF=3 GHz, tpulse =1 µs, rep.rate=10-100 Hz) fed to the structure; • Filling time measurement #2: • Using a CW RF reference with amplitude modulation, according to the scheme of slide 3 (fmod=5 MHz, Ampl=1 Vpp, offset=2.5 V); • With spectrum analizer monitor the frequency content of the feeding signal; • Measure with the oscilloscope the time needed to traverse the structure from the distance of the 2 maxima. RF Crew RF Accelerating Structures TW structure filling time measurement setup fRF RF LO CPL IF TW structure CPL ATT 10 dB Funct. generator RF Crew TTL TRG Oscilloscope RF Accelerating Structures N.A. settings and measurement results Parameter Mode π Mode 0 Working frequency 2.85564 (GHz) 2.81422 (GHz) S11 @ fres -10.8 dB (lin = 0.289) -23.2 dB (lin = 0.07) Q0 8990 10100 QL 3200 4700 Coupling coefficient (ß) 1.81 1.15 RF Crew General measurement settings: - IF BW 40 kHz - # points 1601 - fcenter = 2.83 GHz - fspan = 100 MHz Single mode measurement settings: - IF BW 40 kHz - # points 1601 - fcenter = fres - fspan = 10 MHz RF Accelerating Structures