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High Power Proton Accelerators: Capabilities and Challenges John Galambos Spallation Neutron Source Oak Ridge National Laboratory University of Tennessee Colloquium 10/7/2013 “Rough” Outline • Why high power proton accelerators? • Brief introduction to accelerators • The Spallation Neuron Source Accelerator • Future high power proton accelerators and challenges 2 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy The world of particle accelerators Traditional accelerators aim towards higher and higher beam energy to probe for smaller and smaller particles. The SNS is part of class of accelerators called “proton drivers” which operate at lower energies, and instead push the beam intensity limit. Proton drivers are useful for a variety of applications: neutron spallation transmutation of nuclear waste secondary particle sources... Its a whole different ball game! Getting Neutrons – Two Ways Fission chain reaction continuous flow 1 neutron/fission 180 MeV/neutron Higher average neutron density. Spallation no chain reaction pulsed operation 30 neutrons/proton 30 Mev/neutron Higher peak neutron density. Properties of neutrons for measurements Charge neutral deeply penetrating S=1/2 spin probe directly magnetism Li motion in fuel cells Solve the puzzle of High-Tc superconductivity Nuclear scattering sensitive to light elements and isotopes Actives sites in proteins Help build electric cars Efficient high speed trains Better drugs Why Neutron Scattering? H Li C O S Mn Zr X-rays neutrons • Neutrons have higher scattering cross – section on light nuclei • Compliment light sources (x-rays) Cs Engineering materials Non-destructive analysis of a steel armed concrete block with neutron imaging and X-ray tomography. 09/10/2013 Source: PSI, CEMNET workshop 2007 7 Why Neutron Scattering ? • Neutrons are penetrating – can image high Z dense materials • Can produce moderated neutrons with wavelengths of interest for material studies (atomic spacing) – 0.1 – 10 Å 8 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Neutron sources: How far have we come? SNS Thermal Neutron Flux (n/cm2-sec) 1018 SNS MTR 1015 NRX X-10 1012 109 106 10 3 NRU HFIR ILL HFBR KENS ZING-P Tohoku Linac ISIS LANSCE IPNS SINQ ESS SINQ-II ZING-P Berkeley 37-inch cyclotron CP-2 CP-1 0.35-mCi Ra-Be source Next-generation sources Fission reactors Particle driven (steady-state) Particle driven (pulsed) trendline reactors trendline pulsed sources Chadwick ORNL 97-3924f/djr 100 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 (Updated from Neutron Scattering, K. Skold and D. L. Price: eds., Academic Press, 1986) High Power Proton Sources are Needed for Rare Event Searches in HEP • Stopped pion decay at rest neutrino source – Well understood energy spectra – Study neutrino /nuclei scattering cross-sections, supernove nucleo systhesis, dark matter detectors – Sterile neutrino searches 10 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Rare kaon decays provide important tests of the flavor structure of the Standard Model Need MW proton beams with high duty factor, 3 GeV, 100 kW – 1 MW ORKA test at the FNAL Main Injector 11 4 th Generation K Experiment Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Ultra Cold Neutron Source for Fundamental Physics NUCLEAR PHYSICS ann & apn scattering lengths PARTICLE PHYSICS nucleon-nucleon weak interactions Electric charge scattering lengths in matter gravity beta-decay static EDM N-N oscillations • < 100 n-eV neutrons nucleon structure** neutron crosssections* ASTROPHYSICS /COSMOLOGY • Proton beam 12 – 1-3 GeV, 1 MW, near CW Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy A. Young , NC-State Muon Beams • Charged lepton flavor violation (muons changing into electrons without neutrino emission) – 1 MW, 1 GeV, CW proton beam 13 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy What is ADS? (Accelerator Driven System) High-power, highly reliable proton accelerator • ~1 GeV beam energy • ~1 MW of beam power for demonstration • 10s of MW beam power for Industrial-Scale System Subcritical reactor • • •m Chain reaction sustained by external neutron source Can use fuel with large minor actinide content Spallation neutron target system • Provides external source of neutrons through spallation reaction on heavy metal target Why ADS ? Transmutation of long lived nuclear wastes • “Fast reactor” neutronics used in ADS systems are favorable for actinide burning – Reduce the burden on long term waste storage Why ADS ? Electrical Production • Many ADS concepts utilize the Thorium based fuel cycle : – greater natural abundance than Uranium, – proliferation resistance, and – significantly reduced production of longlived transuranics • An ADS system based on Th fuel would not require incorporation of fissile material into fresh fuel • Expanded use of Th-based fuels is actively pursued in several countries Why ADS? Safety • ADS systems operate far from “prompt criticality” – Important advantage for actinide burning Standard light water reactor Fast reactor breeder Fast reactor burners safer ADS Applications Why Proton Accelerators What about other external neutron “seeds”? Process Example Yield Neutron energy cost (MeV/n) D-T fusion 400 keV 4x10-5 n/D 10,000 Photo-nuclear 20 MeV e- on 238U ~10-2 n/e 2000 Spallation 800 MeV p on 238U ~ 30 n/p 27 • ~ 1 GeV protons are an efficient way to produce external neutrons – High energy physics, nuclear physics, neutron scattering have a rich experience with accelerators in this energy range • Accelerator power is easily “throttled” – Greater flexibility for fuel consumption and safety The First Particle Accelerators - DC • These accelerators use at static, DC, potential difference between two conductors to impart a kinetic energy • Highest voltage achieved is 10’s of MV MIT Van de Graaff ~1930 ORNL Tandem Cockroft-Walton RF Accelerating Cavities • An RF Cavity has a characteristic “resonant frequency”, just like a bell has a resonant frequency (a note that rings) • When RF waves with the correct frequency are introduced into the cavity, the cavity resonates (the bell rings) • The electric field that accelerates particles oscillates (changes direction!) in time Electric Force in Cavity Time Sinusoidal Nature of RF Fields The beam must be timed right to pass through the field only during acceleration, and be shielded from the field during deceleration. accelerated Electric Force in Cavity accelerated Time decelerated The SNS linear accelerator RF runs at a frequency of 402.5 MHz (over 4 hundred million sign changes of the field per second). This accommodates the real-time pulse structure of the beam. Two types of RF Accelerators • Two approaches for accelerating with time-varying fields v E v E E E Circular Accelerators Linear Accelerators Use one or a small number of Radiofrequency accelerating cavities and make use of repeated passage through them. This approach is realized in circular accelerators: Cyclotrons, synchrotrons and their variants Use many accelerating cavities through which the particle beam passes once: These are linear accelerators The Magnetic Lattice The accumulator ring: - No acceleration, only RF bunching - Accumulates 1×1014 protons, 1060 beam pulses from linear accelerator - Has over 200 magnets for bending the bending and focusing. N Dipole magnets used for bending the beam. + Quadrupole magnets used for transverse focusing the beam. Keeps the beam from expanding due to mutual repulsion of protons. 248 meter circumference S injection point S N N S extraction point Focusing the Beam • The ring and transport lines use many different types of electromagnets to bend and focus the beam. • The linac also uses many magnets to focus the beam, some electromagnetic, some permanent magnets. • A beam without focusing wouldn’t get very far! • An accelerator has many quadrupole magnets to keep the beam focused. Beam particles without focusing Beam particles with focusing The Concept of a Cyclotron B E E. O. Lawrence: Nobel Prize, 1939 Accelerators accelerate particles with electric fields (Efields), and bend particles with magnetic fields (B-fields). TRIUMF, the world's largest cyclotron at Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics. (520 MeV). The machine started in 1974 and is still in operation (now for rare isotope acceleration). Synchrotrons – Common Ring Accelerator Technique • Ramp magnetic field and RF frequency to keep beam on constant orbit during acceleration – Separated function bending and focusing magnet systems critical element 27 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy CERN accelerator complex for protons The CERN accelerator complex is presently fed by LINAC2 (proton source) that pulses at a rate of 0.83Hz, i.e. cycles which are multiple of 1.2s, known as basic period The accelerator complex uses time-sharing to provide beam to the different fixed target experiments and to fill the LHC LINAC 2 50 MeV 1.4 GeV 25 GeV 450 GeV PSB PS SPS 3.5 TeV LHC LHC (CERN) is the “Mother” of all particle accelerators, energy wise 27 km circumference • 3.5 TeV on 3.5 TeV proton collisions – To be doubled ! • Beam stored energy ~ 360 MJ 29 – But when only replenished 2/day, ~ 8 kW average power Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Linear Cavity Structures •Linear accelerator operates with RF fields of 402.5 MHz.\ •Since we are keeping the RF fields at a fixed frequency in time, we must space the cavities farther and farther apart to account for the increasing particle velocity. accelerating cavity time= 0 seconds E shielded area E E E time= 0 + 1/402,500,000 seconds E E E E An accelerating tank of the first, Alvarez, linac built just after WWII. Father of all spallation sources: Lawrence’s Materials Testing Accelerator • Deuteron accelerator for production of plutonium and tritium • NaK-cooled Be target • 500 MeV • 320 mA • 160 MW The Materials Testing Accelerator (MTA), built, in the early 1950s, at a site that would later become the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory. The purpose of the machine was to produce nuclear material, but it never produced any (due to uncontrollable sparking). SNS Accelerator Complex Accumulator Ring Collimators Front-End: Produce a 1-msec long, chopped, H- beam 1 GeV LINAC Accumulator Ring: Compress 1 Extraction Injection msec long pulse to 700 nsec RF 1000 MeV RTBT 2.5 MeV HEBT LINAC Chopper system makes gaps mini-pulse Current 945 ns Liquid Hg Target Current Front-End 1 ms macropulse 1ms Neutron scattering users want beam power and reliability The Drift Tube Linac Structure RFQ DTL 2.5 MeV Ion Source (7% speed of light) CCL Super Conduct 1 87 MeV (40% speed of light) • 6 Drift tube tanks, 210 unique drift tubes Super Conduct 2 To Ring Drift Tube Linac Installed DTL in the tunnel, ~ 37 m Coupled Cavity Linac Installed CCL in the tunnel, ~ 55 m SNS Superconducting Multicell Cavities RFQ DTL CCL Super Conduct 1 186 MeV 86.8 MeV Ion 2.5 MeV Source (7% speed (40% speed (55% speed of light) of light) of light) Two types of superconducting cavities: • Medium Beta: designed for v = 61% speed of light – • Gives 10-20 MV/m High Beta: designed for v = 81% speed of light – Gives 10-20 MV/m Super Conduct 2 387 MeV (70% speed of light) To Ring 1000 MeV (88% speed of light) Cryomodules Technology demonstrators Helium tank 5-cell elliptical cavity Cold tuning System Power coupler Space frame Cavities Cryomodule Technology Demonstrator results by the end of 2015 SCL Cryomodules in the Tunnel • 11 medium beta cryomodules 12 high beta cryomodules Ring and Transport Lines HEBT Arc Ring Arc Injection RTBT/Target Beam Charge Accumulates Throughout the Pulse Ring Beam Current Monitor 1 ms End of accumulation 700 ns Final Extracted Beam SNS Power History Cost savings • SNS has run at ~ 1 MW for the past 3-4 years 43 – Not accelerator limited –by UT-Battelle Recently operated up to 1.4 MW Managed for the U.S. Department of Energy Target concerns 1.4 MW R&D Areas for Multi-MW Applications • Beam loss mitigation – Simulation not good enough to predict losses at this level – Smart scraping • Reliability – For user facility support and ADS applications • Target survivability / robustness – Uncertainty in material properties • Charge exchange injection – Laser stripping • Accelerator technology – High power RF generation – Beam chopping – … Beam Loss in the Superconducting Linac Average SCL Residual Activation 60 Activation (mRem/hr) Activation 50 700 Reduced Magne c Field Charge 600 40 500 30 400 300 20 200 10 100 3/ 11 12 /2 4/ 11 9/ 1 6/ 11 6/ 6/ 11 2/ 2 /1 0 /1 0 11 /1 8 8/ 10 /1 0 5/ 2 /1 0 1/ 22 /0 9 /0 9 10 /1 4 7/ 6 /0 9 3/ 28 /0 8 /0 8 12 /1 8 9/ 9 /0 8 6/ 1 /0 8 2/ 22 /0 7 11 /1 4 /0 7 0 8/ 6 4/ 28 /0 7 0 Run • High power proton beam operational loss limit: 1 W/m – 1 part per million at full energy! • SNS observed a low level of beam loss / machine activation – Unexpected – not predicted in design stage! – OK for 1 MW – trouble for 10 MW Fluence (MW-hrs) 800 Predicting Beam Profiles / Beam Loss: Space Charge Effects in the Ring Low intensity High intensity • Effects are as expected, at least to “first order” - profile measurements vs. models – Not ready for predicting absolute beam loss levels or locations Measuring Beam Distributions at 10-5 Levels • Large dynamic range measurements are difficult • Typically expert based systems, measuring beam distributions in a limited number of 6-D cross sections • What should we use as initial distributions for the models???? 40 deg tail Transverse beam profiles. Longitudinal bunch length How Reliable are High Power Proton Facilities? 6000.0 Trip Frequency 100 90 MW‐hrs, hours 1000 5000.0 80 70 100 4000.0 3000.0 10 Produc on hours 2000.0 1 PSI 60 ISIS 50 Lujan 40 SNS 30 Total Availability 1000.0 20 Accelerator Availability 0.1 0.0 Trips/day > 1 Trips/day > 1 Trips/day > 1 Trips/day > 3 2007 2008 min. 2009 2010 2011 hrs 2012 sec hr 10 0 2013 FY • Turns out high power facilities have similar trip rates • Good enough for HEP applications – Need improvement for neutron scattering / ADS applications High Reliability • The ADS applications have the most stringent requirements – 3 trips/month > 10 seconds Buy your way out of the problem for the low energy part – have a hot spare 49 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Superconducting RF linac layout (ESS Example) • Lots of the same thing, over and over again • Implications for robustness and reliability Superconducting RF Linacs are Flexible Sept. 2008 Sept. 2010 Ring Commissioning Run First Run Cavity Design 35 35 35 30 30 30 25 25 25 25 20 20 2020 15 15 1515 10 10 10 10 5 5 5 00 81 81 73 73 77 77 65 65 69 69 57 57 61 61 53 53 49 49 45 45 41 41 37 37 33 33 29 29 25 21 17 9 13 1 5 0 1 E0 (MV/m) E0 (MV/m) E0 (MV/m) 30 1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47 49 51 53 55 57 59 61 63 65 67 69 71 73 75 77 79 81 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31 33 35 37 39 41 43 45 47 49 51 53 55 57 59 61 63 65 67 69 71 73 75 77 79 81 Cavity Cavity cavity cavity cavity • SCL can run with a wide range of cavity performance • But they are flexible, and can accommodate different “gradient profiles” Operating Gradients (MV/m) Medium Beta High Beta Design 10.2 15.6 Production (now) 11.9 12.8 Superconducting RF Linac Retuning Retuning a proton SCL 3) Calculate the change in beam arrival time downstream, and apply corrections to RF setup 2) If a cavity gradient must be reduced…. 1) Measure the beam arrival time at each cavity (in RF phase units) • Superconducting linac acceleration uses many cavities, each providing a relatively small fraction of the total energy gain • Potential exists to “retune” on-the-fly, around an RF equipment problem – Design spare cavities in reserve Handling 1 MW of proton Power is Challenging • Pulsed load on the target is especially tough for SNS • Use a liquid target design (Hg) - 17 kJ in 700 ns @ 60 Hz - Induces cavitation damage 53 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Target Post Irradiation Examination: key to understanding lifetime • Target vessel is multi-walled (4 layers) • Cut-out circular pieces from used targets to examine damage Focus on innermost wall pieces 54 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy “Gizmo” to cut out pieces Target Post Irradiation Examination: key to understanding lifetime • Clear indication of cavitation damage Complete “cut-through along centerline Damage is much “sharper” than beam deposition Repeatable Target 1 – Inner window Target 2 – Inner Window center cut - Target 4 – Inner Window 55 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Target Maintenance / Replacement is with Remote Handling Target control room Manipulator Gallery • Not hands on maintenance • “Improvising capability” is limited High Power Operational Proton Accelerators Facility TRIUMF LANSCE area A 57 Power (kW) 100 80‐120 Energy (GeV) Time Structure Accelerator Type 0.52 CW, 23 MHz cyclotron 0.8 120 Hz linac 70 MeV H– linac + RCS ISIS Present 200 0.8 J‐PARC MR (FX) 240 30 40 Hz to TS‐1 10 Hz to TS‐2 0.4 Hz x 5 us J‐PARC RCS 300 3 25 Hz x 1 us 181 MeV linac + RCS FNAL MI 400 120 9.4 us every 2.2 s Linac + RCS CERN SPS 470 400 4.4 s cycle length linac + 2 stage RCS SNS 1,000 0.94 60 Hz PSI 1,300 0.59 CW, 50MHz • Two operational MW facilities • 7 facilities with order of 100’s kW • Wide variety of accelerator types Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy 3 GeV into RCS linac + accumulator 2 stage cyclotron Planned Power Increases - Existing Machines > 500 kW, development effort ongoing Facility FNAL MI + ANU Power (kW) 700 Energy (GeV) 120 Time Structure Accelerator Type 9.4 us every 1.33 s Linac + RCS J‐PARC MR (FX) 750 30 0.4 Hz x 5 us 3 GeV into RCS CERN SPS 750 400 4.4 s cycle length linac + 2 stage RCS LANSCE area A 800 0.8 120 Hz x 625 us linac J‐PARC RCS 1000 3 25 Hz x 1 us 181 MeV linac + RCS SNS 2500 1.3 60 Hz linac + accumulator • In the 5-10 year time scale: several MW class accelerators expected 58 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy Future High Power Proton Machines > 1 MW, development or design effort ongoing Facility ESS CERN with SPL Project‐X (stage 1+2) Project‐X (stage 3) MYRRHHA Daealus Power (MW) 5 Energy (GeV) 2.0 4 5 3 3 Time Structure Accelerator Type 50 Hz x 2.5 ms SRF linac + accumulator 50 Hz x 6 bunches SRF linac + RCS 2.3 60‐120 CW linac /accumulator 10‐5 duty factor CW SRF linac + accumulator + pulsed 8 GeV SRF linac + RCS 2.4 0.6 CW SRF linac 3 0.8 60 Hz 2 stage cyclotron • Superconducting RF linacs play a prominent role • SRF = superconducting RF 59 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy High Power Accelerator History 1000 Average BeamCurrent Current(mA) (mA) Average Beam 1000 100 100 IFMIF LEDA IPHI Pulsed CW ExistingPulsed + planned CW Planned LEDA IPHI 10 MYRHHA 10 FRIB 11 PSI PSI SPL LANSCE LANSCE TRIUMF TRIUMF 0.1 0.1 SNS SNS MMF MMF ISIS ISIS PSR PSR former ESS Pulsed Superconducting Linacs CW Project X JPARC JPARC RCSRCS JPARC MR MR JPARC 0.01 0.01 AGS AGS 0.001 0.001 0.001 0.001 0.01 0.01 0.1 0.1 11 10 10 Beam BeamEnergy Energy(GeV) (GeV) • Relevant accelerators with ~ MW beam experience – PSI: 600 MeV cyclotron, 1.3 MW – SNS 925 MeV superconducting linac , 1 MW – LANSCE: 800 MeV copper linac, 800 kW FNALFNAL MI MI 100100 10001000 The Accelerator: Different Perspectives …the operator Summary • There is a demand for high power proton accelerators • These are large expensive machines • We have reached the mega-Watt beam operational level • Several Multi-mega-Watt machines are planned for 62 Managed by UT-Battelle for the U.S. Department of Energy