1 / 18

Upgrades to the ISIS Facility

Upgrades to the ISIS Facility. John Thomason. ISIS Accelerator Division. ISIS Accelerators. H  ion source (17 kV) 665 kV H  RFQ 70 MeV H  linac 800 MeV proton synchrotron Extracted proton beam lines. The accelerator produces a pulsed beam of 800 MeV

ely
Télécharger la présentation

Upgrades to the ISIS Facility

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Upgrades to the ISIS Facility John Thomason ISIS Accelerator Division

  2. ISIS Accelerators • H ion source (17 kV) • 665 kV H RFQ • 70 MeV H linac • 800 MeV proton synchrotron • Extracted proton beam lines The accelerator produces a pulsedbeam of 800 MeV (84% speed of light) protons at 50 Hz, average beam current is 230 A (2.9× 1013ppp) therefore 184 kW on target (148 kW to TS-1 at 40 pps, 36 kW to TS-2 at 10 pps).

  3. ISIS Upgrades • Present operations for two target stations • Operational Intensities: 220 – 230 μA (185 kW) • Experimental Intensities of 31013 ppp (equiv. 240 μA) • DHRF operating well: High Intensity & Low Loss • Now looking at overall high intensity optimisation • Study ISIS upgrade scenarios 0) Linac and TS1 refurbishment 1) Linac upgrade leading to ~0.5 MW operations on TS1 2) ~3.3 GeV booster synchrotron: MW Target 3) 800 MeV direct injections to booster synchrotron: 2 – 5 MW Target 4) Upgrade 3) + long pulse mode option

  4. ISIS MW Upgrade Scenarios 1) Replace ISIS linac with a new ≈ 180 MeV linac (≈ 0.5MW) 2) Based on a ≈ 3.3 GeV RCS fed by bucket-to-bucket transfer from ISIS 800 MeV synchrotron (1MW, perhaps more) 3) RCS design also accommodates multi-turn charge exchange injection to facilitate a further upgrade path where the RCS is fed directly from an 800 MeV linac (2 – 5 MW)

  5. Power / Benefit / Cost Upgraded TS1 Neutrons TS2 £ + Risk Existing TS1 Power

  6. ISIS Upgrades, Developments and R&D Work • We have on-going research and studies to develop and fully exploit the machine map out the best development routes define principle upgrades undertake basic R&D into physics of high intensity beams • Main focus presently ~180 MeV Injector Upgrade summarised in the following pages holistic optimisation including targets, neutronics, … “at the user” • Next steps Exploring the possibilities for optimistic & less optimistic funding scenarios Mapping out the best options for a 1-2 MW short pulse neutron source Development and research on present machine

  7. New 180 MeV Linac ISIS Injection Upgrade 70 MeV Linac • A New 180 MeV Injector • Update old linac • Increase beam power ~0.5 MW • Advantages • Reduces Space Charge (factor 2.6) • Chopped, Optimised Injection & Trapping • Challenges • Injection straight • Activation (180 MeV) • Space charge, beam stability, .... MICE 800 MeV Synchrotron TS1 TS2

  8. ISIS Injection Upgrade Ring Physics Study • Snapshots of the work: challenges of getting 0.5 MW in the ISIS Ring Injection Longitudinal Dynamics Injection Straight Modelling Injection Straight Analytical Work Simulation Results Evolution of bunch Test Distribution Foil temperatures Injected distributions in (x,x’),(y,y’),(,dE) RF Bucket Variation of key parameters Transverse & Full Cycle 3D Dynamics Other Essentials: Activation, Diagnostics Predicted Space Charge Limit Single particle tune shift distributions at 0.5 MW Activation vs Energy Activation Measurements Coherent Tune Shift and Resonance Electron Cloud Monitor Strip-line Monitor/Kicker Accelerated distributions in (x,x’),(y,y’),(,dE)

  9. Possible ≈ 3.3 GeV RCS Rings

  10. Bucket-to-Bucket Transfer

  11. 5SP RCS Ring

  12. 800 MeV, Hˉ Linac Design Parameters Grahame Rees, Ciprian Plostinar ( )

  13. Design Options

  14. Capacity upgrade scenarios • “Traditional” 3-stage MW upgrade scenario could be extended so 3.2 GeV RCS includes multiple extraction straights (or switchyard in EPB), with or without 800 MeV linac. • Stacked rings (as at CERN PSB) could be implemented as part of AC magnet replacement programme. Would require increased linac performance, but otherwise it is an engineering challenge to minimise off time during installation rather than an accelerator physics challenge, and would be a very predictable upgrade.

  15. One synchrotron with several extraction straights? Target station #1 Target station #2 Flexible Easy extraction of proton beams of different energies, intensities and repetition rates to suit wide range of neutron experiments “Efficient” footprint Maximises total number of neutron beam lines Linac Synchrotron Would need to drive trim quads. and steerers differently for different energies and intensities, but trim quads. and steerers are pulsed anyway, and so changing trim magnet current profiles from acceleration cycle to acceleration cycle should raise no fundamental complications. Target station #4 Target station #3

  16. Ring High Intensity Beam Studies on ISIS • Some of our R&D Studies Half-integer intensity limit in proton rings Using the ISIS ring to study halo formation New simulation code: Set 3Di Model losses, benchmark on ISIS Simulation Simulation Measurement Y profile (Y,Y) Y profile Head-tail instability Key for high intensity proton rings Higher order loss effects and images Investigating complex loss mechanisms Vertical difference signal (along bunch, many turns) Vertical dipole motion along bunch on successive turns Image driven resonance Loss vs Q measurement Samples along bunch Turn 

  17. Necessary Hardware R&D To realise ISIS upgrades and generic high power proton driver development, common hardware R&D will be necessary in key areas: • High power front end (FETS) • RF Systems • Stripping Foils • Diagnostics • Targets • Kickers • etc. • In the neutron factory context SNS and J-PARC are currently dealing with • many of these issues during facility commissioning and we have a watching • brief for all of these • Active programmes in some specific areas

More Related