Title: INJECTION PAINTING, FOIL
1INJECTION PAINTING, FOIL TARGET DISTRIBUTION
SNS ASAC Review
- Joanne Beebe-Wang
- BNL, Upton, NY 11973, USA
September 13, 2000
2Introduction
- What is injection painting
- It is an injection with a controlled phase space
offset between the centroid of injected beam and
the closed orbit in the ring to achieve a
different particle distribution from the injected
beam. - Why injection painting for SNS
-
- to satisfy target requirements
- to reduce beam losses due to space charge
- to reduce foil hits (foil life-time, beam
loss at foil)
Joanne Beebe-Wang
3Basic Painting Schemes
Correlated painting Anti-correlated painting
Joanne Beebe-Wang
4Analytical Expression
It is a 4-D problem (x, x, y, y). But, if 1)
distribution of injected beam can be expressed
as n(x,x,y,y)nx(x,x) ny(y,y) 2) the
bump in (x, x) phase space moves independently
from (y, y), it becomes a 2-D by 2-D problem.
In normalized x, px phase space, if -
changes slow compare to betatron
oscillation, particles injected at P paint the
same phase space as particles injected at P1 .
Maximum ?x is determined by the particles
injected at Q.
Joanne Beebe-Wang
5Analytical Expression (continued)
Particle distribution due to transverse phase
space painting for a single particle If the
distribution of injected beam is Gaussian with
?0x and ?0y where where I0(z) is the
modified Bessel function of order zero, and
center offset ( ?x0(t), ?x0(t))
Joanne Beebe-Wang
6Analytical Expression (continued)
- From the analytical expression of particle
distribution we can find out - Very high local density at the center of the
beam if ?x(t)?y(t)0. So, one should not
have zero offset in 4-D phase space any time. - Correlated painting will give a rectangular
shaped beam distribution with high density along
the diagonal line, and low density on the x- and
y-axis. - If ?0x ltlt ? x(t) and ?0y ltlt ? y(t),
anti-correlated painting with offsets ? x(t) A
t1/2 , ? y(t) B (tinj -t)1/2 will give a
KV-like particle distribution at time tinj .
Joanne Beebe-Wang
7Basic Painting Schemes
Correlated painting with/without space
charge ?x5.82 ?y4.80 ?inj,x4.93m
?inj,y7.24m ? inj,x0.11 ?inj,y0.07 inj.
?RMS,Nor0.5?mm-mr Final ?120 ?mm-mr
Joanne Beebe-Wang
8 Basic Painting Schemes
Anti-correlated painting with/without space
charge ?x5.82 ?y4.80 ?inj,x4.93m
?inj,y7.24m ? inj,x0.11 ?inj,y0.07 inj.
?RMS,Nor0.5?mm-mr Final ?120 ?mm-mr
Joanne Beebe-Wang
9Basic Painting Schemes
painting scenarios correlated anti-correlated B
eam shape without SC Rectangular Oval Beam
emittance evolution Small to large
constant Final emit. ?x?y(?mm-mr) 120120 160
Foil-hit rate (11 linac dist.) 6.1 ? 8.3 8.0
? 10.5 Max foil temp. (K) (11 linac dist.)
2113 ? 2273 2248 ? 2376 Horizontal aperture (?H
) 11 11 Vertical aperture (?V
) 11 11.5 Susceptible to coupling
Yes No Capable for KV painting No Yes Paint
over halo Yes No Horizontal
halo/tail Normal Normal Vertical
halo/tail Normal Large Satisfy target
requirements Likely Not likely Bump function
Square root Square root candidates
exp(-t/0.3ms) exp(t/0.6ms) for
optimization Combination Sinusoidal
Joanne Beebe-Wang
10Injection Bump Optimization
Joanne Beebe-Wang
11Foil Heating Foil Miss
Injected Beam Distribution Foil Temperature
K
Joanne Beebe-Wang
12Foil Heating Foil Miss (continue)
Injected Beam Distribution Foil Temperature
K
Joanne Beebe-Wang
13End to End Simulation
Foil Miss, Foil Hit Foil Temperature
Joanne Beebe-Wang
14Foil Lifetime Tests on BNL linac
- Same beam size, same energy deposition/pulse
- Lifetime 5-80hrs on BNL linac depending on
foil thickness, fabrication and mounting methods - SNS repetition rate 9 BNL linac repetition
rate - Maximum 24 foils on the foil changing chain
15Foil Heating Scattering
Joanne Beebe-Wang
16Foil Hits Beam Loss
- Beam loss as a consequence of foil traversal
through the following mechanism - (1GeV proton, foil300?g/cm2, foil traversal
rate7hits/particle) - Nuclear Scattering
- estimated fractional loss3x10-5
- Particle loss in gap due to energy straggling
- estimated fractional loss3x10-6
- Transverse emittance growth due to multiple
Scattering - estimated ??4x10-2 ?mm-mr
Joanne Beebe-Wang
17Radiation due to Nuclear Scattering
Particle Loss (Fraction) Radiation at
Injection Area
18Injection Beam Loss
Beam loss caused by injection errors
- Major sources of beam loss that go to the
injection dump - Foil Inefficiency (FI)
- Foil 400?200?g/cm2
- FI 2?10
- Foil miss (FM)
- (see figures)
- Injection dump limit
- FM FI ? 10
Transverse position Linac
emittance error error ?c at injection
???inj-0.5 ?mm-mr
Joanne Beebe-Wang
19Injection Errors caused by Injection Mismatch
- There could be three kinds injection errors
caused by injection mismatch. They cause
emittance growth in the circulating beam. - Current design ?UN120?mm-mr, ?inj,y7.24m,
?inj,y0.042, ?p/p0.25 - Steering Mismatch Expected ?x 0.2 mm,
?x 0.2 mrad ??RMS,UN 0.9 ?mm-mr - Dispersion Mismatch
- Designed ?D 7 cm, expected ?D 0.02
- ??RMS,UN 0.004 ?mm-mr
- ? ?-function Mismatch
- Expected ??/?M ??/?M 0.025
- ??RMS,UN 0.02 ?mm-mr
- The impact on circulating beam emittance growth
is negligible.
Joanne Beebe-Wang
20Target Distribution
Beam requirements at the target
Joanne Beebe-Wang
21Conclusions
- Simulation shows that correlated painting has
better chance to meet the target requirement and
may minimize halo. Anti-correlated painting
causes excessive halo at full intensity. - Halo/tail driven by space charge and magnet
errors can be reduced by splitting tunes. - Injection error increases foil-miss rate which
causes increased dump load and decreased beam
power. Its impact on beam emittance growth is
negligible. - Injection ?, ?-function mismatch can reduce foil
heating. It can also be used to reduce the foil
traversal rate for increased linac emittance.
Joanne Beebe-Wang