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Title: Superconducting RF, the history, challenges, and promise


1
Superconducting RF, the history, challenges, and
promise
  • Hasan Padamsee
  • Cornell University

2
Outline
  • Survey on-going applications with highlights
  • Evolution of gradients, outstanding issues, and
    quest for solutions
  • High gradient applications
  • CW operation (for medium gradient, CW
    applications)
  • Future prospects near term and long term
  • Is there a higher gradient (far) future beyond 50
    MV/m fundamental limit for niobium?

3
Four Decades of SRF Success Stories
  • SRF Started as an exotic technology in the
    1960s
  • Really took off in the 1980s
  • Now become an enabling technology for many
    accelerators !

4
Major Impact on Broad Spectrum of Science
  • High Energy Physics and Low Energy Nuclear
    Physics (1980 2000)
  • TRISTAN, HERA, LEP-II ATLAS, StonyBrook...
  • Penetrated Medium Energy Nuclear Physics (1987)
  • CEBAF
  • Storage Ring Light Sources (2000-2005)
  • CHESS, CLS, TLS, DIAMOND, SLS..
  • Linac Based Light Source (1990-2010)
  • JLABFEL, TTF-I, FLASH
  • Neutron Source - Proton Source (2005-2010)
  • SNS
  • Explosion of Future Applications ! (2010 and
    beyond)

5
World-Wide Collaboration Benefits SRF Technology
and Accelerator Applications
  • SRF Workshops every 2 years
  • Beijing, Cornell, Travemunde, Santa FeBerlin
    (2009)
  • Next SRF Conference Fermilab/Argonne in 2011
  • Generally preceded by several-day tutorials
  • Most proceedings now on JACOW
  • Tesla-Technology Collaboration (TTC) meetings
    every 6 months
  • Delhi, Hamburg, KEK, Frascati, Orsay
  • Next TTC meeting Fermilab, March 2010
  • TTC focused on major technical issues
  • E.g. Gradient yield RD, Industrialization,
    couplers, tuners
  • Various Project Collaboration Meetings
  • ILC, Project X, XFEL...
  • Monthly

6
Present Applications HEP
  • TRISTAN, HERA, LEP-II, CESR-C (total 3.5 GV) now
    decommissioned
  • KEK-B Low Energy Ring (20 MV)
  • Also used in Beijing Tau-charm Factory
  • CESR-C now CESR-TA for ILC Damping ring RD

KEKB
7
KEK Crab Cavity Success
  • 2 MV deflecting kick
  • On May 6, 2009, KEKB broke the world luminosity
    record and achieved a luminosity of 1.96 x
    1034/cm2/sec using the crab cavities.

8
Present Applications Medium Energy NP
  • CEBAF is a 5-pass 6 GeV CW recirculated linac
    based on SRF.
  • originally 4 GeV design
    specification,
  • Three experimental halls for nuclear physics
    research
  • Nuclear structure, Gluonic excitation etc
  • 421/4 original cryomodules assembled in-house.
  • (Then) worlds largest 2K Cryo plant (5kW).
  • Worlds Largest operating installed base of SRF.
  • Soon to be upgraded to 12 GeV

9
CEBAF 12 GeV Upgrade
  • Add 0.5 GV to both linacs to deliver 1.1GeV
    each.
  • The total beam power will remain unchanged at one
    MW.
  • Install 10 new 100 MV cryomodules with 7-cell
    cavities operating at 18 MV/m.
  • CEBAF original 30 MV per cryomodule with cavities
    operating at 7.5 MV/m.
  • Double cryoplant to 10 kW at about 2 K

10
Present Applications Low Energy NP
  • ATLAS (Argonne)
  • 68 cavities operating for three decades for
    heavy-ion, nuclear and atomic physics research,
  • Logging gtgt 100,000 hours of beam-on-target
    operation.
  • The split ring resonators have built up a track
    record in excess of 3 million unit-hours of
    operation with better than 99 availability.
  • ATLAS upgraded in energy by 30 to 50 (depending
    on ion species)
  • Single eight-cavity cryomodule containing seven
    quarter-wave and one half-wave cavity.

11
Present Applications Low Energy NP
  • ALPI, Legnaro, Italy
  • 64 QWR at 160 MHz delivering a total of 49 MV.
  • At IUAC, DELHI, linac
  • 27 QWRs, 3- 5 MV/m

12
RIB Facilities Nuclear AstrophysicsOperating
or Under Construction
  • ISAC-II at TRIUMF in Canada, 20 QWR, 4 CM,6- 7
    MV/m
  • SPIRAL-II at GANIL (Saclay, Orsay, France)
  • 26 QWR, 6.5 MV/m
  • MSU ReAccelerator, FRIB test-bed
  • 3 CM with 15 QWR, 10 MV/m
  • SARAF Israel, RIB
  • and Medical Isotope
  • 48 Half-Wave Resonators, 8 CM, 8 MV/m
  • Near Future CERN- HIE-ISOLDE
  • 30 resonators

SARAF Half-Wave
ISAC-II QWR
13
FRIB, Facility for Rare Isotope Beams at MSU
  • FRIB will allow major advances in nuclear science
    and nuclear astro-physics
  • 200 MeV/u, 400 kW driver linac
  • 336 Resonators QWR and HWR

14
Light Sources Storage Rings
  • CHESS (Cornell)
  • Beam current 500 mA
  • Power/coupler 160 KW
  • Cornell Technology Transferred to ACCEL.
  • Cornell systems used for storage rings around the
    world
  • Taiwan Light Source
  • Canadian Light Source
  • DIAMOND light source
  • Shangai Light Source
  • NSLS-II at BNL (future)
  • Pohang Light Source?

500 MHz
15
Taiwan and Diamond (UK)
16
JLAB - FEL
  • Lased in the 1-6 mm wavelength range
  • Average IR output power of 14 kW (Record !) at
    1.6 mm,
  • Runs in the energy recovery mode with more than
    99.8 efficiency.
  • More than 1.3 MW beam power was energy recovered
    with a beam of 9.1 mA at 150 MeV.
  • Important milestone toward high beam power ERLs
    of the future.
  • The accelerator has been configured with another
    recirculation for the UV upgrade.

FEL with ER
17
TESLA Test Facility (TTF) Now FLASH
  • Six modules installed in FLASH at DESY provide 1
    GeV beam Lased at 6.5 nm
  • With 48, 9-cell cavities operating between 20
    25 MV/m.
  • Strong basis for XFEL which will also be a
    prototype for ILC

18
Best Module Performance Module in FLASH
19
FNAL 3.9 GHz Module Tested Successfully 20 MV/m,
October 09
20
SNS Linear Accelerator
Stuart Henderson ALCPG09
  • TTF Progress in gradients and KEK progress in
    coupler power gt
  • Worlds first high-energy superconducting linac
    for protons
  • 81 independently-powered 805 MHz SC cavities, in
    23 cryomodules
  • Space is reserved for additional cryomodules to
    give 1.3 GeV

21
Stuart Henderson ALCPG09
Individual and Collective Cavity Limits
Individual powering one cavity at a
time Collective powering all cavities in a CM at
the same time
CM19 removed
Large fundamental power through HOM coupler
Design gradient
Field probe and/or internal cable (control is
difficult at rep. rate gt30 Hz)
Average limiting gradient (collective)
Average limiting gradient (individual)
22
Evolution of SRF Technology Over 4 Decades
  • Steady progress in Gradients due to
  • Basic understanding of limiting phenomena
  • Invention of effective cures
  • Ignore all the failed (or not so successful) paths

23
Field Emission
Cures
RRR 250
Thermal breakdown
Multipacting
24
Niobium Purification
Interstitial O, N and C are the major impurities
limiting Nb RRR
25
Typical Progress in Thermal Conductivity (RRR)
(at Tokyo Denkai)
26
HPR and Clean Room Assembly
Fight Field Emission
27
TTF-I (2001) Field Emission Tamed, BCP, HPR Q-drop
25 - 30
30 - 35
35 - 40
20 - 25
15 - 20
10 - 15
CEBAF (1995)
28
Best 12 9-cells
EP and bake
29
Lessons Learned
  • Understanding ( science) drives performance
  • Leads to effective solutions
  • Multipacting solved spherical (elliptical)
    cavity geometry
  • 5 8 MV/m
  • Thermal breakdown solved high purity Nb
  • 10 15 MV/m
  • Field emission solved high pressure rinsing
  • 15 25 MV/m
  • Q-slope solved EP and bake
  • 25 35 MV/m
  • Thermometry has been the key to science

30
Thermometry Has Been the Key to Better
Understanding of SRF Cavity Performance
Limitations
The Miracles of Thermometry
31
  • High Field Q-Slope
  • Field Emission
  • Movie Break !
  • Quench

32
Quench Movie
Iris
Equator
Iris
33
Culprits Revealed by Thermometry/Dissection/SEM
EDX
Field Emitters
10 mm
20 mm
5 mm
Note Melted Region
Stainless Steel
C, O, Fe, Cr Ni
Quench Defects
100 mm
200 mm
50 micron Cu particle fell into cavity
500 mm
500 x 200 microns pit
34
Outstanding Performance Issues and How to Address
Them
  • For the high gradient frontier (S0)
  • Understand and fix the underlying causes of the
    high gradient yield problem for multi-cell 1.3
    GHz cavities (S0).
  • Develop good procedures to maintain high
    performance in cryomodules (S1)
  • For the high Q0 frontier important for CW
    applications
  • What are the sources of loss that limit the
    ultimate Q0

35
Residual Resistance Values for the SNS Medium
Beta Production CavitiesJlab data SNS MB 805
MHz G. Ciovati
High Q Frontier
More HPR
Max Q 6x1010
A lot of scatter, average 8 nO
36
Prospects for Improvement in Gradient Yield
  • Progress takes time
  • Everyone wants to follow a different path
    innovation, creativity
  • Try better preparation techniques
  • Examples later
  • Find the quench producing defects in 9-cells with
    thermometry, inspect
  • Slow method, several cold tests
  • Test in several modes of 9-cell pass-band
  • Indentify pair of culprit cells (or one center
    cell)
  • Warm up, attach 1-cell or 2-cell thermometry to
    culprit cells
  • Locate quench
  • Repeat as necessary
  • Fast Methods
  • Locate multiple quench spots in one test with 2nd
    Sound in Superfluid He
  • Apply 9-cell superfluid large-scale thermometry
  • LANL system complete
  • Use optical inspection tools
  • KEK optical camera, Questar system
  • Make a wax replica of defective area, carry out
    optical profilometry
  • Example for one-cell

37
Field Emission Reduction By New Rinsing Methods
  • Better cleaning after electropolishing
  • Jlab Ultrasonic degreasing
  • DESY Ethanol rinsing

Ethanol dissolved particle, but leaves an
imprint, Possible quench site? unknown
S particle deposited on sample during EP (Cornell
Basic RD)
38
Fast Method
Fixed thermometer locations
39
(No Transcript)
40
Museum of Quench Sources (Pits and
Bumps)Identified by Thermometry and Optical
Examination
Bump found at Quench location on Niowave/Roark
1-cell cavity (Cornell) Deep scratch subsequently
found on Cavity Forming Die
26 mm
Pit found by KEK optical inspection with CCD
camera in AES 1cavity Quench at 18 MV/m
Bump found by KEK Optical Inspection with CCD
camera in AES 9-cell cavity with thermometry
(Jlab and FNAL) Quench at 18 MV/m
41
Wax Replica Method at FNAL
Optical Profilometry
42
9-cell Superfluid He Thermometry and Inspection
at LANL
43
9-cell defects for cavity AES003
  • Pre-heating detected in all cases

Slide 43
44
The Ultimate Sacrifice !Temperature Map
Dissection
  • General heating due to high field Q-slope
  • Defect heating at pit before quench

45
Prospects for Higher Q0Map the Loss Distribution
for High Q Cavity
3 GHz, 1-cell Cavity - Wuppertal
  • Apart from one defect,
  • Dielectric and magnetic loss spots can be
    identified
  • All other loss spots have residual resistance
  • lt 1 nW
  • Q0 3 x1011

Defect
Dielectric Losses
Magnetic losses
46
World Record Q0 (1.3 GHz Single Cell)
5 mGauss DC magnetic field
47
Future AdventuresSRF Based Projects
  • A wide spectrum of ideas
  • gt the large impact of success of existing
    srf-based facilities and srf technology advances
  • Not likely that all projects will come to pass
  • Classify descriptions according to science
  • High Energy Physics
  • Leptons (ee-, mm-, n), high intensity protons
  • Nuclear physics
  • Electrons, heavy ion
  • Astrophysics (already covered FRIB)
  • Rare isotopes
  • Materials and biology
  • Light source
  • Storage ring, FEL, ERL
  • Neutron source

48
Lepton Colliders beyond LHC
? By far the most likely!
E lt 1 TeV
CLIC
E gt 1 TeV
Multi TeV
Muon Collider
Welcome to Fermilab, Young-Kee Kim, October 19,
2009
48
49
ILC
50
(No Transcript)
51
Progress for S1 at DESY-FLASH
52
Progress toward S2 at DESY- FLASH
  • Beam current requirement (9mA)
  • Successful 10 hr operation at 3 mA
  • Short time at 6 mA
  • Several hours of intermittent operation close to
    9 ma with short trains of 300 500 us
  • Limited by beam loss
  • Still need to show 31.5 MV/m operation with 9 mA
    beam

53
High Intensity Proton Accelerators for HEP
  • Fermilab PX
  • Neutrino beams, Rare decays, future source for
    neutrino factory, muon collider
  • 2 MW beam power
  • 2 GeV
  • CERN SPL
  • Higher luminosity for LHC
  • Neutrino beams, future source for neutrino
    factory, muon collider
  • Injector for EURISOL (Rare Isotope Facility)
  • 5 GeV
  • 2- 4 MW beam power

54
Project X Options
  • 2 MW of beam power over the range 60 120 GeV
  • Simultaneous with 2 MW beam power at 2 GeV
  • Rare decay physics
  • Compatibility with future upgrades to 8 GeV
  • gt2 MW of beam power over the range 60 120 GeV
  • Simultaneous with gt150 kW of beam power at 8 GeV

HIPA Workshop - S. Holmes
Page 54
55
(No Transcript)
56
CERN Comes Back to SRF !
High Power SPL (HP-SPL)
  • Start with Low Power SPL, 4 GeV, 20 mA
  • Replacement of klystron power supplies, upgraded
    infrastructure (cooling electricity, etc.)
  • Addition of 5 high b cryomodules to accelerate
    up to 5 GeV (p production for n Factory))
  • Beam power 2 4 MW

SC-linac (160 MeV 5 GeV) with ejection at
intermediate energy
110 m 0.73 GeV
0 m 0.16 GeV
291 m 2.5 GeV
500 m 5 GeV
SPL description
Medium b cryomodule
High b cryomodules
Debunchers
High b cryomodules
To PS2 and Accumulator
From Linac4
Ejection
to EURISOL
Length 500 m
57
Neutrino Factory Muon Collider
  • Proton Driver needs 4 MW
  • Neutrino Factory needs about 4 GV acceleration,
    multiple passes
  • Muon Collider needs 200 GeV acceleration
  • Depending on number of passes in RLA
  • Five passes?

58
European Spallation Source (ESS)Sweden
  • 5 MW upgradable to 7.5 MW, 2.5 GeV
  • 15 MV/m, coupler power 1.2 MW (dual couplers)
  • Pulsed 2 ms, 20 Hz
  • High reliability and low beam losses
  • Synergies with EURISOL, SPL, eRHIC

59
Future Light Sources
  • Probe matter at finer length and time resolution,
  • Increased precision and detail
  • Temporal evolution of electrons, spins, atoms,
    and chemical reactions down to the femtosecond
    time scale
  • Spectroscopic and structural imaging of nanoscale
    objects or inhomogenities with nanometer
    resolution and ultimate spectral resolution
  • High peak and average brightness
  • photon flux in small phase space area
  • Short pulses (lt ps)
  • High spatial and temporal coherence (uncertainty
    limited)
  • High energy resolution (uncertainty limited)
  • Cover only a few of the many ideas under
    exploration

60
XFEL (20 GeV) Under Construction
FLASH
XFEL
The biggest SRF application to date 20 GeV
61
Energy Recovery Linacs vs. Storage Rings
  • Storage rings are approaching limits of
    performance
  • Low emittance for higher brightness requires
    bigger wigglers for damping
  • Bunch length hard to get below a few picoseconds
  • SRF Linacs can preserve very low emittances of
    todays and tomorrows electron sources,
  • if potential gun performance realized in CW
  • Emittance scales like 1/E
  • Can run CW, both for high average power/rep rate
    and for multiple users
  • Challenges
  • 100 mA injector, HOM damping (for BBU and
    losses), halos, ions at very high average current

62
Cornell ERL Injector and ERL_at_CESR ConceptBased
on TESLA Technology BUT CW and Medium Gradient
ERL Injector Now Under Commissioning
Planning
Future 5 GeV ERL
63
Cornell ERL Injector Cavity Assembly
Injector Cavity Fabricated at Cornell
  • ERL cavity with He vessel and INFN blade tuner
  • Two TTF-III improved couplers for 50 kW CW power
  • Beam line HOM absorbers

64
String Assembly in Clean Room
5 Cavity ERL Injector Cryomodule Assembled at
Cornell All Parts (except cavities) fabricated in
Industry
65
Finished ERL Injector Cryomodule
  • Gradients to 15 MV/m reached with beam 8 mA CW
  • Couplers tested to gt 50 KW CW
  • But Q values 2 3 X109 (dust contamination?)
  • Disassemble CM and HPR recover Q to 2 x 1010

66
KEK and Arc-En-Ciel (France)
  • KEK Compact ERL

67
LBNL FEL Concept
  • Soft X-ray FELs

68
FEL
69
ERLs also for NP
BNL ERL RHIC
For Prototype ERL at BNL
JLAB ELIC
70
Summary Total Voltage Installed (Near Future)
  • 600 Cavities
  • QWR
  • HWR
  • SSR
  • TSR
  • For
  • SPIRAL-II
  • MSU-ReA
  • MSU-FRIB
  • CERN HIE-Isolde
  • ESS
  • PX

XFEL
FLASH
SNS
MVolt
LEP-II
Jlab
Jlab-Upgrade
Year
71
Prospects for Continued Voltage Growth
(Optimistic)!
PX, SPL
ILC
v-facctory
XFEL
ESS, ERL, e-RHIC
72
Is there a higher gradient future gt 2025 beyond
Niobiums 50 MV/m fundamental limit ?
Nb3Sn Hc1
73
Nb3Sn An Uphill Climb for the Next Generation
ofSRF Enthusiasts
  • Now ?!
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