460 likes | 641 Vues
Accelerator Plans at KEK. John W. Flanagan, KEK Super B Factory Workshop Honolulu 19 January 2004. LoI: Accelerator Design for a Super B Factory at KEK. Machine Parameters Beam-Beam Interactions Lattice Design Interaction Region Magnet System Impedance and Collective Effects RF System
E N D
Accelerator Plans at KEK John W. Flanagan, KEK Super B Factory Workshop Honolulu 19 January 2004
LoI: Accelerator Design for a Super B Factory at KEK • Machine Parameters • Beam-Beam Interactions • Lattice Design • Interaction Region • Magnet System • Impedance and Collective Effects • RF System • Vacuum System • Beam Instrumentation • Injector Linac • Damping Ring • Construction Scenario
Beam-Beam Interactions • Simulation Methods • Particle distribution • Gaussian: bunch shape fixed • Particle-in-Cell (PIC): arbitrary bunch shape possible • Should be more accurate, though numerical noise may be a problem. • Coherent dipole motion causes growth in beam size and reduction of luminosity in PIC model. (Not seen in Gaussian model). • Beam-beam limit (zero crossing angle) • Tune difference may help smear out coherent motion. Improvement in luminosity with different tunes (~KEKB)
Simulation: Crossing Angle Dependence • Luminosity reduced with a crossing angle • Geometric effects • Nonlinear diffusion -> beam size growth
Simulation: Crab-Crossing • Crab-crossing restores full luminosity of a head-on collision.
Simulation: Other Parameters • Lower horizontal beta function improves luminosity. • Lower emittance does not. • Best current ratio: 10A (LER) / 4.4 A (HER) • Energy transparency ratio
Lattice Design Beam Optical Parameters of SuperKEKB:
Lattice Non-interleaved 2.5-Pi Cell Wide tunability of horizontal emittance, momentum compaction factor. Principle nonlinearities in sextupole pairs cancelled out to give large dynamic aperture
Lattice • IR region: main difference from KEKB is greater overlap of solenoid field on final-focus quadrupoles. No major issue found. • Transverse dynamic apertures: • LER ok • HER under study • Refine modelling of IR fields LER dynamic aperture Red: injected beam
Interaction Region • Crossing angle: +/- 15 mrad is working assumption. • Horizontal beta function at IP and horizontal emittance chosen based on beam-beam simulations to maximize the expected luminosity.
Interaction Region • Move final focus quadrupoles closer to IP for lower beta functions at IP. • Preserve current machine-detector boundary. • Rotate LER 8 mrad. • QCS and solenoid compensation magnets overlap in SuperKEKB. • Issues: • QC1 normal or superconducting? • Dynamic aperture => need damping ring for positrons, at least.
Magnet System • Outside of the IR, will largely reuse present KEKB magnets, with some modifications and upgrades for new vacuum system, crab cavities.
Impedance and Collective Effects • Resistive Wall Instability • Growth rates (800-1000 s^-1) lower than damping rate of feedback system (5000 s^1). • Closed Orbit Instability due to long-range resistive wake (Danilov) • Thresholds (12.3/12.2 mA for LER/HER) above design currents. • Electron Cloud Instability (Positron Ring) • With ante-chambers and positrons in the HER, simulations show that 60G solenoid field should clear the electrons. Uncertainties: • Distribution on walls and amounts of electrons. • Behavior of electrons inside lattice magnets. • Ion Instability (Electron Ring) • Currently suppressed by feedback. • With electrons in LER, simulated initial growth rate faster than feedback damping rate, leading to dipole oscillation with amplitude of order of vertical beam size => possible loss of luminosity. • Coherent Synchrotron Radiation • Rough numerical approximation of CSR in LER bends shows that beam pipe radius is small enough to shield beam from energy loss at 6 mm bunch length, but at 3 mm bunch length the transient energy change has an amplitude of 1.5 keV (depending on location in bunch). • Investigations just started.
RF System • ARES Cavity System • Normal-conducting cavities with energy-storage cavities attached. • LER & HER • Superconducting Cavity (SCC) System • High cavity voltage • HER only ARES SCC Total number of RF units at KEKB and SuperKEKB. One unit = one klystron + 1 SCC or 1(2) ARES at SuperKEKB (KEKB)
Coupled-Bunch Instabilities due to RF Cavities • Longitudinal bunch-by-bunch feedback system will be needed. • New HOM dampers developed for ARES and SCC
Crab Crossing • Originally included as an option for KEKB, but have managed to reach design luminosity without them. • Simulations indicate that they will be needed to go from 1e35 to 5e35/cm^2/s. • New cavity being developed for higher beam currents • Current plan is to start at KEKB with a single crab cavity in Nikko • Beam will be crabbing all the way around the ring.
Vacuum System • Intense synchrotron radiation • 27.8 kW/m in LER, twice as high as in KEKB • 21.6 kW/m in HER, 4 times as high as in KEKB • =>Ante-chamber structure • Also motivated by need to reduce photo-electron clouds.
Vacuum System • Prototype ante-chamber tested at KEKB • Combined with solenoid field is very effective at reducing photoelectron build-up.
Vacuum System T0 = revolution period (10 usec) k = loss factor I = beam current nb = number of bunches • HOM power losses • Excessive heating • Minimize loss factors • Largest loss factors at movable masks which protect detector from particle background • Resistive wall and bellows are next. • HOM absorbers to be installed near large impedance sources
Vacuum System • HOM dampers have been developed for masks, to reduce heating of pump elements near masks. • Winged damper with SiC rod based on type developed for ARES. • Successfully cured pressure rise due to heating of pump elements at KEKB • Absorbs 25% of 20 kW generated • HOM power of mask in SuperKEKB will reach 200 kW • Efficiency and capacity of HOM damper need to be improved.
Vacuum System • Pumping scheme • Pressure requirement: Average pressure of 5e-7 Pa to achieve a beam lifetime of 10 hours. • 1e-7 around IP to minimize beam background in detector. • <1e-6 locally in electron ring to keep ion trapping below level that can be handled by feedback. • Adopt distributed pumping scheme, a strip-type NEG. • To reduce number of high-current feedthroughs, U-shaped strip is used. • Flange and Bellows • Helocoflex outside with copper (MO?) RF bridge inside • Bellows heating requires better RF shield
Vacuum System • Comb-type RF shield developed to replace RF fingers. • Tests at KEKB very promising. • Development continuing.
Beam Instrumentation • Beam Position Monitors • Bunch-by-Bunch Feedback System • Synchrotron Radiation Monitors • HER and LER SR Monitors • Damping Ring SR Monitor
Beam Position Monitors • Use same front-end electronics. • New button electrodes • New connector design for improved reliability. • 12 mm -> 6 mm diameter • Signal power same as at present, at higher beam currents, to match dynamic range of existing front-end electronics.
Bunch-by-Bunch Feedback • New BPMs for higher beam currents. • Transverse feedback similar to present design • Detection frequency 2.0 -> 2.5 GHz. • Automated LO phase and DC offset tuning. • Transverse kicker needs work to handle higher currents • Improved cooling, supports for kicker plates. • Longitudinal feedback to handle ARES HOM and 0/Pi mode instability • Use DAfNE-type (low-Q cavity) kicker. • QPSK modulation with center frequency 1145 MHz (2.25 x RF freq.) • Digital FIR and memory board to be replaced by new GBoard under development at/with SLAC. • Low noise, high speed (1.5 GHz), with custom filtering functions possible. • Extensive beam diagnostics.
SR Monitors • Current extraction chamber (copper) may need increased cooling. • HOM leakage needs to be measured (500 W predicted at full current). • May need absorbers • Direct mirror heating from SR irradiation should be minimized. • Increase bend radius of weak bends • Lowers total incident power. • Also increases visible light flux – desirable to help see effect of single crab cavity.
Second SR Monitor for Dynamic Beta Measurement • Build a second SR source in each ring • Using known phase advance between two locations, can measure the dynamic beta effect due to beam-beam collisions. • Correct beam size estimation at IP • More importantly, can monitor beam-beam parameters directly, in real-time. • Useful for luminosity tuning. • Second source: create a local bump near current source • Minimize disturbance to lattice • Can use existing optics huts.
Damping Ring SR Monitor • Gated camera for imaging turn-by-turn bunch size damping. • Up to 4 bunches in ring at one time, at two different stages of damping. • Diffraction-limited resolution below 10% if optical line not too long (~10 m).
Injector Linac • Intensity Upgrades • Electron: increase bunch current from pre-injector • Positron: stronger focusing field in capture section after target • Energy Upgrade • Replace S-band (2856 MHz) RF system with C-band (5712 MHz) system to double field gradient in downstream section of linac.
Energy Upgrade Pulse beam kicker installed before positron target for quick switching between beams (50 Hz).
C-Band Klystrons Prototype C-band structure installed and tested at linac using actual beam (2003). Measured field gradient of 41 MV at 43 MW agrees with expectation.
Linac BPMs • Upgrade read-out oscilloscopes with newer models capable of full 50-Hz read-out.
Damping Ring • Positron emittance needs to be damped, to pass reduced aperture of C-Band section and to meet IR dynamic aperture restrictions. • Electron DR may be considered later to reduce injection backgrounds in physics detector, but for now only positron DR considered. • Damping ring located downstream of positron target, before C-Band accelerating section.
Damping Ring • Energy Compression System (ECS) in Linac-To-Ring (LTR) line, to meet DR energy acceptance requirements. • Bunch Compression System (BCS) in Ring-To-Linac (RTL) line to accommodate short bunch length needed by C-Band accelerating structures.
Damping Ring Parameters RF: Use KEKB ARES cavity (509 MHz)
Damping Ring Lattice • FODO cell has large dynamic aperture, but large momentum compaction factor increases required accelerating voltage. • Reversing one of the bends reduces the momentum compaction factor. • Adopt reverse/forward ratio of ~1/3 FODO cell w/alternating bends Dynamic aperture Green = injected beam, red = 4000 turns max deviation (thick = ideal machine, thin = machine errors included)
Construction Scenario • The upgrade of KEKB to SuperKEKB is proposed for around 2007. • R&D and production of various components will be done in the first four years in parallel with the physics experiment at KEKB. • The installation will be done during a one year shutdown in 2007, and then the commissioning of SuperKEKB will begin.
Summary • LoI is in draft stage. • SuperKEKB at L=~5e35/cm^2/s can be built.
Machine Parameters • Luminosity: • Beam-beam parameters: • Energy transparency:
Beam-beam blowup Evolution of luminosity and beam size in weak-strong (PIC) and exact solution (Gaussian) models