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SLAC Klystron Lectures Lecture #12 June 2, 2004 Klystron Power Supplies, Modulators and Testing. Saul Gold Stanford Linear Accelerator Center slg@slac.stanford.edu. What have we covered?. History of Klystrons Velocity modulation, Kinematic theory and Space-charge theory
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SLAC Klystron LecturesLecture #12June 2, 2004Klystron Power Supplies, Modulators and Testing Saul Gold Stanford Linear Accelerator Center slg@slac.stanford.edu
What have we covered? • History of Klystrons • Velocity modulation, Kinematic theory and Space-charge theory • Design of the electron gun • Design of the electron beam and focusing • Gain-Bandwidth calculations and simulations • Other microwave amplifiers • Klystron fabrication, vacuum and processing
What’s Next? • More Processing • Voltage processing • Burn off whiskers • Electro polish surfaces • Beam processing • More outgassing, beam interception • Cathode surface cleanup • Obtain even emission – amps/cm2 • RF processing • More outgassing, beam interception • Burn off whiskers in Cavities
What’s Next? (cont.) • Test- Verification of performance • Power output, peak and average • Gain Curves • Efficiency • Cathode roll-off (Emission curve) • Best heater power setting • RF Breakup check • Bandwidth
Prepare Tube for Test • Dress • Collector water jacket and Body water fittings • Focus Magnet • Electro-magnet • Permanent magnet (Single or PPM) • Separate gun coil • Temperature monitors • Corona rings • Lead shielding
Examples of klystrons 5045 in Final Assembly 5045 on the Test Stand
Examples of klystrons PPM3-5 with PPM Focusing PPM3-5 on the Test Stand
Examples of klystrons SLAC PEP II Klystron in its magnet SLAC PEP II Klystron
Test Philosophy • Pulsed Klystrons • Beam Process only • Narrow Pulse width • Low Rep Rate • Slowly raise beam voltage as function of time and pressure • Lower voltage, Raise Rep Rate and repeat • Add RF • Low Rep Rate, Narrow RF Pulse Width • Increase RF drive to saturate Klystron as function of time and gas pressure • Lower Drive, Raise Rep Rate and repeat • Lower RF Drive and Rep Rate, increase RF pulse width and repeat
Test Philosophy • Widen Beam Pulse Width • Beam process only as before with voltage and Rep Rate • Add RF (starting at previous width) as before slowly process width RF Drive, Rep Rate and Pulse width • Continue until full Beam and RF Pulse width with Highest Rep Rate and Klystron saturated • Processing is a function of time and gas pressure
Test Philosophy (cont.) • XL4 Processing Example • Start at ~0.5usec Beam Pulse at 10 Hz. • Raise Beam voltage from minimum ~50kV to a maximum of 440kV • Raise Rep Rate in steps of 10Hz, 30 Hz, 60 Hz. • Start RF at 100 to 200nsec • Raise Drive to saturate at 55 to 60MW • Raise Rep Rate in steps of 10Hz, 30Hz, 60Hz • Widen RF Pulse width 100, 200, 300, 500nsec
Test Philosophy (cont.) • XL4 Processing Example (cont.) • Widen Beam Pulse in steps of 0.5, 1, 1.5usec • Raise Beam voltage from minimum ~50kV to a maximum of 440kV • Raise Rep Rate in steps of 10Hz, 30 Hz, 60 Hz. • Start RF at 0.500 or 1usec • Raise Drive to saturate at 55 to 60MW • Raise Rep Rate in steps of 10Hz, 30Hz, 60Hz • Widen RF Pulse width in steps
Test Philosophy (cont.) • CW Klystrons • Hi-Pot electron gun w/ cold cathode • Beam Process only • Slowly raise beam voltage as function of time and pressure within collector dissipation limit • Add RF • Increase RF drive to saturate Klystron as function of time and gas pressure
Klystron Protection • Gun arcs • Limit peak current and peak energy • Sense arc and turn off pulse (next pulse) • Beam interception • Sense current and turn off pulse (next pulse) • Sense with current, sense with temperature, • Sense with delta temperature • Gas Pressure • Gun or collector pressure- turn off beam • Output or window pressure- turn off RF • Pulse klystron can stop pulse for gun arcs, etc. • CW klystrons require a crowbar on the P.S.
Klystron Protection (cont.) • Basic Interlocks • Klystron Water or air flow • Low heater current • Modulator fault • Low Tank oil • Magnet current (over/ under) • Magnet Over temp • Magnet water • Turn off beam, add time delay before magnet off • All these interlocks turn off beam
Klystron Arcs • American tube companies • Arc Energy 10 joules • 1000 Amps/msec max. rate of rise • Remove current in less than 10msec • Thales (France) • 40 joule max. • For High Power devices below 200kV • Newer Klystrons above 500kV • May run more than 1 klystron per modulator
Arcing in a Klystron Gun • Operate in excellent vacuum • 10-8 to 10-9 torr • Designed not to arc • Fields are well below breakdown • No over voltage condition • Plasma created • Moves at 2-3 cm/ msec
Klystron Arcs • Klystron protection will always be an issue • Gun Vacuum critical • Line-type modulators have been successful at high peak powers for 1 & 2 klystron operation • Arc formation much slower than originally believed • Hundreds of nanoseconds • Line modulators have dumped ~70 joules • Induction modulator has dumped ~ 200 joules • Klystrons have survived this higher energy
Modulators • Most high peak power klystrons operate on Line-Type Modulators • SLAC has close to 250 Line-Type Modulators on the LINAC • Advantages • Relatively simple electronics • Natural Protection with current limiting to 2 times operating • Disadvantages • Fixed Pulse width • Matched impedance w/ klystron • Pulse shape load dependent • Needs to be tuned for flat pulse • Limited Rep Rate
Basic Line Type Modulator Lch L1 L2 Ln Rc C1 C2 Cn Variable DC Power Supply 1:N Thyratron Trigger Heater Supply
Line-Type Modulator Formulas Lt= total PFN Inductance Lt = L1+L2+…..Ln Ct= total PFN Capacitance Ct = C1+C2+…..Cn Zpfn = Lt / Ct Zpfn = Zkly / N2 T = 2 Lt Ct Ct = T / 2 Z Lt = T Z / 2
Line-Type Modulator Formulas (cont.) Pulse Transformer Ratio N = Vpeak max / Vps max # PFN sections Dependent upon pulse ripple – More sections = higher frequency ripple, more tunability Rise time of PFN tr ~ T / 2 n n = # sections Value of components : L & C
Other Modulators • Direct Switch C Variable DC Power Supply Heater Supply HV Isolation Low Capacitance Pulse droop: C E = I T C is filter cap, T is pulse width, I is beam current Rise Time: C E = I T C is load stray cap, T is rise time, E is beam voltage, I is peak current
Other Modulators • Hybrid Modulator 1:N C Variable DC Power Supply Heater Supply Primary C droop: C E = I T Rise time of pulse is mainly a function of Pulse Transformer
Other Modulators • Induction adder • Stacked cores with a common secondary Heater Supply Variable voltage DC Power Supply • Usually single turn primary and secondary • Can use multi-turn secondary • # Sections function of switch voltage
Other Modulators • Marx Modulator • Charge in parallel, discharge in series - - - - - Variable DC Power Supply + + + + 1. Standard- On switch, full discharge 2. On switch with PFN’s in place of capacitor 3. ON/ OFF Switch with Partial discharge of capacitor
References • G.N. Glasoe, J.V. Lebacqz,”Pulse Generators”,McGraw-Hill • J.Millman, H. Taub,“Pulse, Digital and Switching Waveforms”,McGraw-Hill • R.B. Neal, “The Stanford Two-Mile Accelerator”,W.A. Benjamin Inc. • P.W. Smith, “Transient Electronics”, John Wiley & Sons Ltd. • S.L.Gold, “Klystron Gun Arcing and Modulator Protection”