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The CERN dc Spark System (and a little bit of theory) CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Introduction Over the past years CERN has built and operated a series of small highvoltage systems in parallel to our main high-gradient rf testing program for CLIC. The main reasons are to: • Complement when relevant expensive and time consuming rf tests with simplified, cheap tests. Compare materials, surface preparation, try out conditioning strategies etc. • Provide a platform to make experiments which test basic ideas about material dynamics under high surface fields. Simplified experimental conditions, direct benchmarking of simulation tools etc. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN First an overview of the hardware of our dc systems CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Hardware status and evolution: plane cathode, tip anode Plane cathode, typically 12 mm diameter disk sample. Tip anode, 1 mm radius hemispherical tip. Moveable anode with capacitive gap-height control. Gaps typically 10-50 μm. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Hardware status and evolution: Large area electrodes 62 mm diameter electrodes separated by precision ceramic spacer, gaps between 10 and 60 μm. Very large surface both compared to breakdown crater size and high field region in rf cavities allows study of effects of production (machining, heat treatment, chemistry) and operation (conditioning, breakdown statistics) related issues. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Vacuum chamber CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Mechanical switch based high voltage pulser Initial system based on mechanical switches. Limited to 1 Hz repetition rate so becoming obsolete. However still used for field emission measurements due to high impedance of switches. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN High repetition rate, high-voltage pulser We now use a MOSFET-based commercial switch, which allows us to pulse up to 1 KHz with pulse lengths from 1 to around 8 μs (followed by exponential decay). CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Same conditioning algorithm in rf and dc Part of rf conditioning interface. Part of dc conditioning interface. Both implemented in National Instruments PXI/Labview. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Highlights of recent results and capabilities A high-priority for us has been to first show that the high-rep rate and large-electrode system behaves similarly to rf. I will show you data which indicates that this is accurate. The process of exploiting the new hardware this is thus just beginning. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Most important empirical dependencies For a fixed BDR For a fixed pulse length BDR ~ E Ea t1p/ 6 const 30 a Ea30 t 5p BDR CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 const Walter Wuensch, CERN Gradient dependence of BDR dc rf rf: breakdown rate as a function of field . The same dependence is seen in with dc. This data was take with the anode-tip system. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Gradient dependence of BDR Further data taken with large electrodes and high-rep rate pulser. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Pulse length dependence of BDR Pulse length varied by adjusting switching time and bleed resistor. Preliminary results compared to τ6 dependence typically seen in rf. Will be repeated, especially with Marx generator. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Conditioning in rf and dc rf data from CLIC damped structures CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 From first fully heat treated electrode pair! Unfortunately the electrode surface was in contact with ceramic. Conditions anyway. To be repeated. Walter Wuensch, CERN Long-term evolution of breakdown rate Power law fit: • rf structures range between -6.8 and -9.2 • dc system, -7.8 CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Effect of conditioning algorithm -200 Normalized breakdown rate 10 -205 10 1. Feedback phase, gradient -7.87 3. Stepped voltage phase, gradient -3.12 -210 10 2. Constant voltages phase, gradient -2.59 8 10 9 10 Cumulative nr of pulses 10 10 Preliminary investigation of effect of conditioning algorithm. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Effect of venting system -82 10 Normalized BDR ( (MV/m) -74 10 Normalized BDR ( (MV/m) -30 ns-6 ) -83 10 -30 -6 ns ) Test vent of dc system, 3 days Before venting After venting gradient -3.146 gradient -28.14 -84 10 -85 10 -76 10 -86 10 -78 10 9.8 1 9.9 10 10 Cumulative nr of pulses -80 10 4 -82 10 2 1. Feedback phase, gradient -7.87 2. Constant voltages phase, gradient -2.59 3. Stepped voltage phase, gradient -3.15 4. Reconditioning after 3 day vent, gradient -28.12 -84 10 8 9 10 CLIC10Project meeting, 29 September2015 Cumulative nr of pulses 3 10 10 Walter Wuensch, CERN Breakdown statistics 700 Data Long-term BDR= 2.59e-005 Short-term BDR= 2.07e-003 Two-exponential fit -3 10 rf 600 400 300 KEK Probability density Cumulative BDs 500 -4 10 -5 10 200 100 -6 0 10 0 dc Cumulative nr of breakdowns 3.5 1 x 10 2 3 Cumulative pulses 4 5 6 7 x 10 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 Number of pulses before breakdown 7 8 4 x 10 4 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 2 4 6 8 CLIC Project meeting, 29nr September2015 Cumulative of pulses x 10 8 Walter Wuensch, CERN Theoretical studies CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Dislocation dynamics and criticality – Hebrew University of Jerusalem CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Atomistic simulations – University of Helsinki CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN FEM simulations and connection to KMC – University of Tartu CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Advanced microscopy – Hebrew University of Jerusalem and CERN CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN V. Dolgashev, EAAC2015 CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN We didn’t measure breakdown rate and quote “maximum.” From memory was probably around 10-2 CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Outlook – scientific program • optimization of production – multi-sample program for machining, chemistry and heat treatment. • Optimization of conditioning strategy • Electrodes for INFN to optimize chemical treatment of non-brazed rf photoinector • Investigate high electric field behaviour of Ti 3-D printed electrodes to support printed rf component development. • Re-heat of conditioned cathodes to determine mechanism of conditioning. • Time structure of field emission. • Nb electrodes • Integrate dynamic vacuum measurement • Surface microscopy CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Outlook – hardware development • Marx generator for fast rise and fall time. Good for pulse length dependence and comparison to rf. • 2nd large electrode chamber • Cool-able, 4.2 ⁰K, system: To test high-peak power processing for superconducting cavities, high-field material dependence (Cu is FCC, Nb is BCC, field emission and BDR as a function of temperature. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Conclusions The large-electrode pulsed dc system shows fundamental behaviour similar to rf structures, so its validity as a test bed has been validated. Ready to exploit for rf structure development, CLIC and beyond. Steady advance in the quantitative understanding of high-gradient phenomena. This too starts to feed back on rf structure development. However severe lack of people-power in the lab. Please help! CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN More information And a workshop dedicated to vacuum arcs https://indico.cern.ch/event/354854/. CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN Acknowledgements I have the luxury of reporting on the hard work of others. Names in roughly the order of appearance in this presentation: S. Calatroni, F. Djurabekova, A. Descoudres, N. Shipman, D. Godkov, A. Solodko, A. Olyunin, J. Koverman, M. Barnes, I. Profotalova, T. Murananka, B. Woolly, A. Degiovanni, J. Giner, A. Grudiev, T. Higo, A Korsback, Y. Ashkenasi, T. Muranaka, I. Profatilova, F. Djurabekova, S. Parviainen, V. Jaanson, V. Zhadin, V. Dolgashev CLIC Project meeting, 29 September2015 Walter Wuensch, CERN