Title: PEP-II IR2 LER BPM Button Pulling Mechanism
1PEP-II IR2 LER BPM Button Pulling Mechanism
October 25, 2006 Nadine Kurita, Michael
Kosovsky, and Nick Reeck
2Motivation
- Low Energy Ring (LER) Beam Position Monitor (BPM)
feedthroughs are experiencing button heating
Button
3Motivation, Contd
- BPM feedthroughs cannot easily be replaced, as
they are welded into the chambers - To replace, every chamber would need to be
removed. Then each feedthrough would need to be - Ground off the chamber
- Replaced with a new BPM feedthrough
- Electron beam welded into chamber
- Cost and time prohibitive need an alternate
solution
Weld
4Purpose
- The purpose of the button puller is to remove the
BPM buttons from the existing vacuum chambers
without removing the chambers (in situ). - Remaining 2.4 mm pin functions as new button
CHAMBER
BPM
5Access
- Nearly every BPM chamber has a bellows on at
least one end of the chamber. - The bellows can be removed to give chamber access.
BPM Location
Bellows
6Access
- There is approximately 4 (101.6 mm) between the
chambers available for the mechanism to be
inserted into the chamber when the bellows is
removed.
4 Gap
7Assembly Sequence
Borescope
Collet
Handles
Locking Screw
Anchor
Shafts
8How It Works
- The collet is carefully positioned below the
button - The borescope is used to guide the collet into
position
Button
Collet
9How It Works, Contd
- With the collet in position, the cam shaft is
activated by rotating the cam handle.
Cam Handle
10How It Works, Contd
The cam shaft transforms the rotational motion
into translational motion. The cam shaft
consists of two cams that are lagging 90 deg to
each other. The inner cam operates the Collet
the outer cam operates the Outer Plunger,
PF-343-650-14.
Collet
Cam Shaft
Outer Plunger
Outer Plunger Cam
Collet Cam
11Lab Testing
- Prior to use in the tunnel, we verified operation
in the lab. - Worked exactly as intended
- Did not break a single pin in 10 button pulls
Borescope Image
Inserting puller into the chamber
12In the Tunnel
- BPM distance from the end of the chamber varies
from 3 to 72. - Alignment with button tricky, often time-consuming
CHAMBER
13Pin Breakage
- On average, one pin in every 4 feedthroughs is
broken. Fractures may occur due to - Pre-existing cracks in the pin (brittle fracture)
- Slight misalignment of button puller
- Cold welding of the button to the pin
- In every case, fracture occurs at diameter change
in pin (the logical fracture site)
Pin Fracture Site
14Progress
- GREEN Completed location
- RED Yet to be pulled
- As of Monday, October 23
- 97 out of 117 buttons pulled (83)
- 26 out of 97 buttons pulled broke the pin (27)
2032
2082
2164
3132
1162
2056
2112
2142
2182
3041
3052
3072
3102
3149
3184
3172
IP
2052
2122
3112
3182
2022
2062
2092
2152
2172
2185
3062
3042
3082
3142
3162
15PEP-II LER Arc BPM Replacement
PEP-II BPM Retrofit Update October 25, 2006 Nick
Reeck Nadine Kurita
16Existing LER Arc BPM Feedthrough
15mm Button
Housing
Ceramic Disc (or Glass)
Pin
SMA Jack
Cross section of existing BPM (SA-342-601-26)
with parts labeled
17Option 1 Pull Button, Leave Pin
- Pull off 15mm button, leave the pin as a 1.4mm
button
- Pros
- Simple
- Cheap
- Cons
- May lose some resolution, especially in single
bunch, single pass
18Option 2 Press Fit
- Pull off 15mm button, press on a 7mm button
- Pros
- On Site modification (slight radioactivity a
concern) - Good electrical contact
- More robust that old buttons
- Cons
- Button press largely trial and error, have to
measure buttons and pins to .0001 - Lots of SLAC labor
19New BPM Feedthrough
- Remove old BPM feedthrough, install new BPM
feedthrough
- Pros
- Better thermal conductivity (Boron Nitride disc)
- Very robust
- Excellent electrical contact
- Less SLAC labor
- Cons
- More expensive
20New BPM Design
Borosilicate Glass
One-Piece Button and Pin
Laser Welds
Boron Nitride Disc
21Photos of New Design
22Electropolishing the Moly
- Purpose Smooth surface cracks to reduce stress
concentration points - We wish to reduce or eliminate the failure mode
seen in IR-2 BPM feedthroughs - As can be seen in these photos, electropolishing
is effective
3 Minutes
1 Minute
Before
23Electropolish Fixture
- Made a fixture to hold the parts during
electropolish (700 parts electropolished to
date). - Prevents pins from being electropolished rough
surface likely helps glass adhesion during firing
Electropolish Fixture
Molybdenum Button / Pins
24Bakeout
- First 44 BPM feedthroughs were placed in a can
for bakeout - Vac shop could not get the can to pump down
- XPS Results marginally clean parts, but high
vapor pressure contaminants - Magnesium, sodium, calcium, sillicate, carbon
- Add up to 36 atomic percent of surface
composition - BPM feedthroughs were cleaned at SLAC
(degreased), put back in can for bakeout on
Thursday, October 19 - Still somewhat dirty, having trouble pumping down
- As of Monday, October 23 we do not have RGA data
25Installation Schedule (estimate)
Arc 1 11/3 11/10
Arc 11 12/7 12/14
IP
Arc 9 12/1 12/7
Arc 3 11/10 11/17
Arc 7 11/24 12/1
Arc 5 11/17 11/24
(Assumes 2 crews, 2 weeks to complete each arc)
26Questions?
27Phases of Operation
- Once the collet is in position, there are four
phases during one shaft handle rotation. - One complete shaft rotation is necessary to pull
the button
28Phase 1
- 0-90 degrees The Collet is being inserted into
the .04 radial gap and engaged with the BPM
button. The Outer Plunger is dwelling.
Outer Plunger
Collet
29Phase 2
- 90-180 degrees The Collet is dwelling in the
inserted position. The Outer Plunger is moving
upward to force the collet fingers tightly around
the button.
30Phase 3
- 180-225 degrees The Collet, with the engaged
BPM Button, travels a half stroke (4mm) downward.
Hence, the BPM button is being removed (pulled
from the BPM pin). The Outer Plunger is dwelling
in the upward position, preventing the Collet
from disengaging from the BPM button.
31Phase 3, contd
- 225-270 degrees The Collet, with the engaged
BPM Button, travels the rest of the stroke (4mm)
toward chamber center plane. The Outer Plunger is
dwelling in the inserted position.
32Phase 4
- 270-360 degrees The Collet, with the removed
BPM Button, is dwelling in the lower position.
The Outer Plunger is moving towards the chamber
center plane to its lower position.
- So, one 360 degree rotation of the shaft handle
removes one BPM button.
33Disassembly
- The mechanism is then disassembled. The BPM
button and the mechanism are removed from the
chamber.
34Mechanical Design (cont.)
- To remove the next BPM Button the cycle is
repeated. - The mechanism is rotated 180 degrees about the
vertical axis to remove the right versus the left
BPM buttons - The mechanism is rotated 180 degrees about the
horizontal axis to remove the top versus the
bottom BPM buttons.
35BPM Pull Status
36Installation Schedule
- Delivered
- October 11 45 units
- October 20 150 units (195 total)
- To Be Delivered
- October 27 150 units (345 total)
- November 8 150 units (495 total)
- November 15 150 units (645 total)
- November 22 150 units (795 total)
- November 29 105 units (900 total)
37XPS Results