350 likes | 363 Views
CERN Chopper Status. F. Caspers, M. Paoluzzi. CERN, HIPPI 08 meeting October 29th, 2008. Contents. Introduction CERN chopping scheme Layout Technical requirements Evolution of the SPL chopper Modifications in 2005 Status by September 2006 What happend since end of 2006
E N D
CERN Chopper Status F. Caspers, M. Paoluzzi CERN, HIPPI 08 meeting October 29th, 2008
Contents • Introduction • CERN chopping scheme • Layout • Technical requirements • Evolution of the SPL chopper • Modifications in 2005 • Status by September 2006 • What happend since end of 2006 • Status by April 2008 • Some photos • What is still to be done • Drivers Status • Acknowledgements Most of these slides were already shown in May 2008 at the WP4 meeting
SPL Layout • Superconducting Proton Linac (SPL) • Fast beam chopping at Ekin = 3 MeV ; thusis about 8% • Fast chopper required to establish desired beam pattern • RFQ: Radio frequency quadrupole • DTL: Drift tube linac • CCDTL: Coupled cavity DTL • PIMS (PI-Mode Structure) • = 0.65, = 0.92 : superconducting cavities
CERN Chopping Scheme • Most demanding scheme for SPL operation: • cutting out three bunches out of eight • repetition rate 44 MHz • bunch spacing 2.84 ns ; 10 to 90% rise and fall time required < 2 ns 8*2.84 ns ( 44 MHz)
Chopper Line (1) • Chopper line lattice designed such as to magnify the kick from the chopper; this reduces required kick field • The chopper plates have to be installed in the quads; this saves length and reduces space-charge related emittance growth Chopper off Kick-magnifying quad Chopper on
Chopper Line (2) bunching cavities chopper beam dump
Modifications in 2005 • The chopper plates are no longer DC-wise floating (no more triaxial mode of operation) • Now we have a coaxial instead of a triaxial chopper structure • The triaxial version was meant for simultaneous dual mode of operation, i.e. 0 to 10 MHz: electrostatic deflector, above 10 MHz travelling wave mode • Removal of isolating units both in water cooling circuits and coaxial driving lines
Meander lines • Initially samples of the meander lines were produced at CERN • While all parameters were basically ok (electrical, vacuum), reproducibility of certain electrical parameters (electrical length, match) was not always perfectly satisfactory • After the accomplished proof of principle with CERN technology, a supplier that can well control all the process parameters was needed; a possible change in technology is not a problem as long as the key properties are preserved • Kyocera was eager to enter in a cooperation with CERN and willing to adapt their technology to our needs • The plate that was recently furnished compared well in all aspects with the best CERN samples and we hope that the promised good reproducibility will show up in reality
Meander line: Technology • Technological differences between the CERN and Kyocera meander structures: In the meantime (october 2008) I learned that it is possible to produce nonmagnetic Nickel layers by adding 18 % of phosphor [F.C.]
Machining Electrode for electrochemical deposition removed by grinding Grinding Area CERAMIC PLATE Process Flow Ceramic incoming inspection Metallize printing (Ag thick-film) Firing Cu Plating Au Plating Machining Resistance Testing Final inspection RF Property Testing Packing Courtesy: Kyocera
Status by September 2006 • First meander line plate from Kyocera were received in June 2006 but it turned out that the attenuation was too high • In the second iteration the technological parameters were properly adjusted and the last sample was very satisfactory • After extensive electrical tests this single plate was installed in the chopper tank • Vacuum, leak and heat tests performed successfully
Electric Measurements: Transmission Attenuation Attenuation over one chopper plate • Measurements performed on single chopper plate with an image plane 10 mm above the line’s surface to simulate the presence of a second plate • Frequency domain transmission • A DC resistance of 1.1 was measured, which agrees very well with the low-frequency limit of the measured attenuation • 3 dB bandwidth 940 MHz. If there was no phase distortion the rise time would be • All rise times quoted are 10 to 90% values Generator bandwidth
Transmission Step Response • Response for 0 to 700 MHz low pass step function (Kaiser Bessel weighting function with = 6) • Comparison between a measurement with and without the image plane. Due to the high electric field energy in the alumina the kick field does not change much when the symmetry is broken • Measured rise time trm = 1.771 ns, to be compared with tri = 1.407 ns of input pulse; structure rise time • This is a conservative estimate of tr since the tti is rather short and we get into the highly dispersive region of the response
Phase Distortion Phase without image plane • From the measured phase without image plate the electrical delay of 16.73 ns (linear term) was removed • With image plane (realistic configuration) the electrical length was 16.83 ns, within 0.1 ns of the required value • The remaining phase is not flat as for a dispersion-free line; thus we have phase distortion • The phase distortion is due to coupling between adjacent lines in the meander structure. This coupling increases quickly with frequency like in a microstrip directional coupler • In an ordinary first-order low-pass the 45 degree points coincide with the 3 dB points. Here they are at 375 MHz, i.e. much lower than the 3 dB points Generator bandwidth
Reflection Generator BW • Very good impedance match of meander line to 50 : reflection in frequency domain of the order of -30 dB below 500 MHz • These data were measured on a test jig consisting of a single plate with SMA connectors fixed on either side
Reflection Step Response Twice the line length of ¼17 ns • Response for 0 to 700 MHz low pass step function • S11 very small, of the order of 0.02 which is another indication of good match • The line impedance is not perfectly constant over the meander length as can be seen from the bump at t = 10 ns. • Towards the end of the line an apparent increase in line impedance can be seen. This is an artifact caused by the lossy line; could be corrected numerically
Tuning of Electrical Length • It was tried to adjust the electrical delay of a chopper plate by modifying the metal ground plane • Cutting a longitudinal groove into the ground plane reduces the effective e and thus increases the group velocity on the line. Since the variation in line impedance is over distances much shorter than the wavelength, the other electrical properties should not be affected much • For two 5 mm wide and 3 mm deep grooves a 5% decrease in the electrical length was found on a CERN plate Generator bandwidth
What happend since end of 2006 ? (1) • We have seen that the originally used aluminum support plates for the alumina ceramic are not usable since they liberate internal stress when heated and show considerable deformation ( up to several 100 micron); this has even led to the destruction of ceramic substrates when mounted (fortunately only old ones, which we were allowed to destroy) • This deformation is a very critical issue since the thermal contact betwen the ceramic plate and the metal support depends strongly on the small vacuum gap between the ceramic and the metal. • In fact this point has been subject of many discussions and the heat transfer between the ceramic and metal plate is essentially an electromagnetic tunneling effect ! • The wavelength corresponding to room temperature is about 10 micron we the average space between metal and ceramic plate has to be below a few microns in order to meet the tunneling condition (similar to a microwave waveguide below cutoff signal transmission)
What happend since end of 2006 ? (2) • Thus it was decided to replace those aluminum plates by stainless steel plates which are heat treated (to release all internal stresses) and copper coated (without using nickel as intermediate layer [magnetic field!) and finally having a flash of gold to prevent oxydation. • The copper coating towards the ceramic layer is required for keeping losses of the image currents from the microstrip structure within reasonable limits. • One may raise the question about degradation of thermal conductivity due to the use of stainless steel • The anser is that this completely irrelevant since the thermal impedance of the vacuum gap is by far the dominating contribution.This has been shown experimentally in vacuum in 2006. • If one would solder/braze the ceramic plate directly onto the metal support the thermal resistance would reduce by more than factor of 30. This is relevant and also under discussion in the frame of applying this concept at GANIL
What happend since end of 2006 ? (3) • We also noticed that due to changes in production technology at Kyocera (now all parameters are well under control and production is reproducible) certain samles did not meet out specs and we had to return them. • As a consequence we found a considerable scatter (up to 1.5 ns) in electrical delay as well as a systematic offset between the different ceramic plates which were delivered over the last 3 years. • Thus we had to apply means in reducing the scatter and getting the mean value of the delay right (16.7 ns nominal) • For this problem we decided to apply the „groove“technique for fine tuning , which of course only works on one direction i.e. reducing the el. delay. • In this context the question comes up: • How is the electrical delay (which is frequency dependent, see privious slides) exactly to be defind? • Do we take the el.delay at low frequencies or at 100 MHz or at 200 MHz ? • Or do we refer to the 50% point of the rising slope of the step excitation ?
Transmission AttenuationStatus April 2008 Loss values of 1 db at 200 Mhz are ok. and consistent with previous data. 21
Transmission Step ResponseStatus April 2008 We will place plate1 and plate2 (red and green trace) into one chopper unit as they match rather well (c.f. 50% point) and plate 3 and plate 4 into the other unit 22
Reflection (time domain, step response)Status April 2008 Note that for the blue and the green trace the char. impedance is slightly too low (refl factor -2 %) and for the red trace is slightly toohigh (+2 %) 25
Some photos (1) Rear side with water cooling circuit and RF connectors for rigid coax lines to the vacuum feedthrough grooves Note, that the grooves are good for venting (vacuum) the confined space between the ceramic plate and the metal support 26
What is left to be done • Final assembly of the chopper plates and the tanks …..done by now (October 2008) the chopper tanks are already in the beamline under construction. • Final vacuum test…done by now (October 2008) • Final electrical test (DC high voltage and DC high current) under vacuum; such tests were done already 2 years ago , but not on the same ceramic plates • DC tests with beam (DC bias voltage on the plates with open termination = Static deflection) • RF power tests under vacuum without and with beam when the pulser is available. • Production of spare quadrupoles ! • Whatever else I might have forgotten…. 28
Drivers status FID Technology Pulsers • Positive and negative units have been delivered and characterized. • Units succesfully tested at 1MHz, 1ms burst and 50Hz repetions rate for two weeks continuos operation. • Reliability problems due to incorrect triggering could be highligted. 29
Drivers status Achieved parameters 30
Drivers status Parameters to improve (1) 31
Drivers status Parameters to improve (2) 32
Drivers status Synchronization electronics • Fast synchronization electronics prototype has been developed. It is composed of : • a synchronism detector. • a fast adjustable delay. • digital pulse to pulse loop that locks the rising front of the amplifier output pulse to a reference pulse. • This compensates slow delay variations (max 30 ps/pulse) and stabilizes the delay within ~100 ps. A similar loop can also be built to compensate the delay variations. 33
… finally • The achievement of the full specifications seems to be a very complicated task and the experience gained until now is very important. • The rise and fall time are only part of the difficulties as pulse delay and pulse length distortion are also very difficult to be maintained within a fraction of ns. • Even if only partially fulfilling the specifications, 3 units of each polarity will be delivered at the end of November 2008. They will already implement some improvements. • The availability of the drivers will allow testing in 2009 the overall chopper system without beam. • The development will then continue to achieve full specs.
Acknowledgements • We would like to thank the AB-RF workshops for assembling the tank, F. Wurster, M. Nagata and Mr U.Behrens from Kyocera for fruitful cooperation in development and implementation of the technologies for printing the meander structure • J. Borburgh for assistance with the heat transfer measurements and in particular Vladimir Bretin and his crew from the RF mechanical workshop for his infinite patience and diligence in mounting and demounting this structure. • Thanks also to R. Garoby and T. Linnecar for support