high resolution cavity bpms from rhul

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High resolution Cavity BPMs from RHUL N Joshi*, S Boogert, F Cullinan, A Lyapin, et al. *[email protected] JAI at Royal Holloway University of London, A Morgan, G Rehm et. al. DIAMOND Light Source DITANET topical workshop on BPM , CERN, January 16, 2012

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High resolution Cavity BPMs from RHUL. N Joshi* , S Boogert, F Cullinan, A Lyapin, et al. *[email protected] JAI at Royal Holloway University of London, A Morgan, G Rehm et. al. DIAMOND L ight S ource. DITANET topical workshop on BPM , CERN, January 16, 2012. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

High resolution Cavity BPMs from RHUL

N Joshi*, S Boogert, F Cullinan, A Lyapin, et al.*[email protected]

JAI at Royal Holloway University of London,

A Morgan, G Rehm et. al.

DIAMOND Light Source

DITANET topical workshop on BPM , CERN, January 16, 2012

Page 2: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

JAI - John Adams Institute(NOT Japanese Accelerator Institute!)

RHUL – Royal Holloway, University of London

Page 3: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

BPM work at JAI/RHUL

ATF• Running the BPM system• Provided electronics for the S-band system• Initiated both the S- and C-band designs• Main running system with ~40 BPMs• Resolution and stability studies• Will be covered in our talk tomorrow

CLIC• Have just established the collaboration with CERN

and Fermilab• The first prototype built at CERN, measurements at

RHUL• Details in Andrei Lunin’s talk

Diamond Light Source• Trying to come up with an improved solution for

CBPMs• More in the following slides

Page 4: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

Working principle: Cylidrical cavity BPM

Page 5: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

R

jmnmn

00

1

LQ2

Vcavity

x

x dVE

LE

W

V

Q

R

2011

20

1111

211

,11

20

losso PWQ

extoL QQQ

111

Basic equations

Transverse Resonance mode frequency:

Quality factor:

Loaded quality factor:

Decay time constant:

Normalized shunt impedance

Typical power spectrum of modes excited inside the resonance cavity.

2cos

2 00,1,1

1 z

extd

k

x

xq

Q

R

Q

ZA

Voltage induced by position offset:

)( 0 ti

t

dd eeAV

Page 6: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

Computation and EM simulation codes

Advanced Computational Electromagnetic-3P (ACE3P) suit, SLAC, USA. Parallel, higher order, finite element based. Runs on NERSC super computers.

o Omega3P : Eigenmode solver to find normal modes of the cavity.

o T3P : Time domain solver to calculate transient response.

o S3P : S-parameter solver for transmission properties.

Electromagnetic (EM) simulation codes.

GdfidL : 3D EM simulation code written in Fortran. Finite difference time domain (FDTD) solver at core. Runs on a cluster of 61 nodes at RHUL. Solvers:

o Eigen-mode solver o Time domain solver

Page 7: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

Cavity BPM project for NLS-DIAMOND

Science disciplines utilizing DIAMOND light source.o Chemistryo Cultural heritageo Earth scienceo Engineering

o Environmental science

o Life scienceo Physics and material

science

Major parameters:o Accelerated particle : e-

o Particle energy : 3GeVo Circumference : 561.6 mo Beam current : 300 mAo Bunch repetition rate: 500kHz

Page 8: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

DIAMOND BPM: RF design and simulation

BPM development project at DIAMOND1:

BPM cavity with beam pipe andcoupler with feed-through

Waveguide coupler with feed-through

Basic design considerations :

oDipole frequency in C-Band range.oRelatively high Qo Frequency separation in XY to

improve isolation via different slot size in X and Y

oNo tuning.

Page 9: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

Waveguide coupler

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: simulation

Page 10: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: simulation

o Monopole frequency : 4.5 GHzo Monopole reduction by waveguide

fcut-off (Waveguide ) > fmonopole (Cavity)

o Dipole frequency : 6.47 GHzo Dipole coupling into the waveguide

fcut-off (Waveguide ) < fdipole

(Cavity)

Eigen mode solution : Monopole

Eigen mode solution : Dipole

Page 11: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

S-parameter simulation CST

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: simulation

A. Morgan, DLS

Page 12: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: Time domain simulation

Field Propagation Output signal.

oSimulated using T3P. oBeam offset by 1mm in X and Y both.

Page 13: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

DIAMOND BPM simulation resultsMonopole frequency 4.5 GHz

Monopole suppression > 55 dB

Dipole frequency 6.457 GHz

Frequency separation between X and Y position data

~ 5 MHz

X and Y plane isolation ~ 50 dB

QL (decay time constant ) Y-plane ~ 3000 (0.073 s)

Expected sensitivity ~ 0.5 V/mm/nC

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: simulation

o Cavities were fabricated by FMB Berlin.

Page 14: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

RF Measurements

o Peak Frequency S11: 6.376GHzo Peak Frequency S22: 6.371GHzo Coupling loss: ~ -10

dB o XY isolation : ~ -15

dBo Monopole suppression: > -

55 dBo Qload : 2892

Page 15: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

RF Measurements

Page 16: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

S-parameter simulation ACE3P

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: simulation

Page 17: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: RF Measurements (Mode orientation)

Dipole : Rotation angle= ~13

o -4…4 mm scan in 0.2 mm steps.

o Movers and VNA were remote controled and synchonised using USB and VISA over LAN.

o All S-parameters are recorded during single frequency sweep

o 6400 S-para files were processed in parallel mode on cluster.

o Rotation agrees with isolation.

o Perhaps, can use external tuners to tune the X-coupling?

o May also be an interesting study case for advanced analysis

Page 18: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: Beam testing in ATF2

Cavity Installation:

o The cavity has been installed on a mover system.

o Can be moved irrespective of other system in transversally in X and Y by +/- 1.5 mm

Signal detection with diode:

o Cavity outputs from one port for X and Y each is connected to a Shottky diode.

o Dioe out digitized using network scope located outside the tunnel.

The main installation (3 BPMs) is at Diamond, but there dedicated time is needed for tests due to long bunches. 1 BPM was installed at ATF2 where it can be compared to the rest of the BPMs in the beamline and worked on parasitically.

Page 19: High resolution Cavity BPMs  from RHUL

DIAMOND Cavity BPM: Beam testing on ATF2 o Cavity moved in 50 µm steps.o Sx = 0.4735 µV/µmo Sy = 0.427 µV/µmo Seems too lowo Checking…