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LCLS Undulator Bellows Module

LCLS Undulator Bellows Module. Internal Design Review. Soon-Hong Lee. Contents. Layout General Requirements Specifications Conceptual Designs Materials for Bellows Module FE Stress Analysis Mechanical Failure Test Conclusions. Layout Short Break Diagnostic Section.

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LCLS Undulator Bellows Module

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  1. LCLS Undulator Bellows Module Internal Design Review Soon-Hong Lee

  2. Contents • Layout • General Requirements • Specifications • Conceptual Designs • Materials for Bellows Module • FE Stress Analysis • Mechanical Failure Test • Conclusions

  3. LayoutShort Break Diagnostic Section

  4. General Requirements Bellows motion requirements • Baking temperature at ~200 C • Fabrication tolerance of chamber, BPM, Quad. • Longitudinal cradle motion constraint = 3.0 mm • Total axial travel  5.0 mm • Adjacent two undulators are tilted and/or in parallel • Quad center manual adjustment range =  2.0 mm • Total lateral offset   2.0 mm • Adjacent two undulators are tilted symmetrically • Angular stroke for bellows module = 2  tan–1 (height change/length between bellows module)   • Height change = 2 mm   (~2.5) + 2 mm   (~2.5) = 10 mm 2 x tan–1 (10/3800) = 0.3 • Undulator segment pitch tolerance (rms) = 14 rad • Total angular rotation  0.5 From www.flexhose.com

  5. General Requirements • Mechanical Concept of Bellows Module • Consider axial travels/constraints for easy installation and maintenance • Consider lateral offset with flexible contact fingers and static stub • Consider maintenance cycle and material fatigue life • Consider mechanical restraints to prevent damages for bellows and fingers • RF Connections • Provide a sliding surface with good lubricity and good electric conductivity • RF fingers, spring fingers, and stub mechanism • RF seal ring or spring gasket across flange joints • 0.4 ~ 0.5 mils silver plating on the shield fingers • 0.2 ~ 0.3 mils rhodium plating on the stub

  6. Specifications

  7. Bellows Module Removable tie rods for restraints to prevent damages EVAC flanges with chain clamps for space limitation and easy maintenance Welded Bellows (200-125-3-EE) Axial travel: 16~60 mm lateral offset:  4.3 mm angular offset: 50 RF-connections

  8. Bellows Module - Exploded RF Fingers (BeCu 174) with Ag-plating Stub (OFE Cu) & Spring Fingers (BeCu) with Rd-plating RF seal ring or spring gasket

  9. Materials for RF Fingers and Stub Need Heat Treatment after forming Flange Stub Tube Fingers Fingers

  10. RF Finger Stress Analysis 3 mm at tip

  11. RF Finger Stress Analysis 324.8 MPa at root > Fatigue strength of BeCu (276MPa)

  12. Design Parameters • To investigate maximum stress at root • contact types (point contact or surface contact) • # of RF-fingers • # of Spring-fingers • shape of fingers to reduce the overlap damage • thickness and length of fingers RF-finger root Spring finger Stub RF-finger tip

  13. FEA Case Study + 2mm • Use Pro/Mechanica - Contact Analysis • - Surfaces of fingers & stub are contacted • - Applied ±2 mm (Y) for lateral offset, ± 5 mm (Z) for axial travel • Criteria • - Maximum Displacement < 8.0 mm • - Maximum Stress < 276 MPa • (based on fatigue strength of BeCu Alloy 174) + 5 mm - 2mm

  14. Case 1

  15. Case 3-1

  16. Case 3-2

  17. Case 8

  18. Case 9

  19. RF Fingers 0.15 mm thick 53.5 mm long 16 fingers

  20. Spring Fingers 0.15 mm thick 29.5 mm long 8 fingers

  21. Bellows Module Assembly

  22. Mechanical Failure Test • Object of failure test is to prove the part in the following conditions • 2,000 cycle actuation • ± 5.0 mm axial travel distance • ± 2.0 mm lateral offset movement •  0.5 of angular stroke • Ag- & Rd- plating thickness

  23. Conclusions • Established design specifications based on physics requirements, maintenance, and installation etc. • Conceptual design and drawings are completed. • Based on FE analysis (contact analysis) by use of Pro/Mechanica, max. stress on fingers is expected to have 226MPa which shows below fatigue strength (276 MPa) of BeCu Alloy 174. • Lubricity and mechanical failure tests are planned to investigate the Rd- & Ag-plating thickness and the performance of RF- & Spring-fingers.

  24. RF Fingers and Stub PlatingBellows Testing Jim Morgan

  25. RF Fingers and Stub Plating and Test Requirements • Plating Requirements • Maintain electric continuity and provide lubricity across the sliding joint ( RF fingers and Stub) during operations • Optimize plating performance • Avoid galling • Minimize loss of plating • Avoid loss of plating adhesion (flaking) • Testing Parameters for Bellows Assembly and Sliding Joint • Test at 10-7 torr • Allow visual inspection of sliding joint during the test • 2000 cycle test • ±5mm axial travel (static and dynamic) • ±2mm lateral offset (static and dynamic) • ±0.5° angular offset

  26. Approach 1. Plate RF Fingers and Stub with Rd and Ag according to specifications developed for the bellows for the PEP- II High Energy Ring* 2. Test fingers as assembled inside the bellows to insure acceptable performance at operating conditions for 2000 cycles 3. Change coating thicknesses if required 4. Optimize performance as budget and schedule allow *Curt Besler, Jeffery Berg “High Current RF Shield for PEP-II Vacuum System Expansion Joint” LLNL M.E. Nordby, N. Kurita “Bellows Design for PEP-II High Energy Ring Arc Chambers” SLAC

  27. Plating Materials and Initial Thickness RF Fingers – 0.4 to 0.5 mils Ag Stub – 0.2 to 0.3 mils Rd Plating thickness can be changed to optimize performance. Other possible materials for increased lubricity at the joint include: • Dicronite – impregnated Tungsten Disulfide • Nanolube – nested nanoshpere structure Tungsten Disulfide

  28. Section Thru Test Fixture Set-up for dynamic axial Testing

  29. Enlarged View – Test Fixture Enlarged view

  30. Bellows Prototype Schedule

  31. Bellows Prototype Costs • Material costs from current loaded schedule • Bellows $ 1,500 • Test Equipment $ 4,000 • Evaluation of plating $ 3,000 • Rh plate stub $ 900 • Ag plate fingers $ 3,000 • Fabrication of small parts $ 600

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