Title: Piezo Studies and Temperature Measurements
1Piezo Studies and Temperature Measurements
- Ruben Carcagno
- May 11, 2005
2Background
- Fast tuners (e.g., piezo tuners) are needed to
maintain high RF power efficiency in high
gradient (e.g., 35 MV/m) SCRF cavities - Key component for cost reduction of ILC and
Proton Driver - FNAL piezo tuner studies were done for the 3.9
GHz CKM deflecting cavity at A0. - Experience and results are transferable to 1.3
GHz cavities for the ILC and Proton Driver. RD
in these areas will continue at HPTF.
3Detuning and RF Power
- RF power increase for field control due to
detuning
?f cavity detuning (Hz) f1/2 cavity
bandwidth 200 Hz for 1.3 GHz TESLA
cavities 65 Hz for 3.9 GHz CKM
cavities
- Detuning highly sensitive to small changes in
cavity shape - Example 13-cell, 3.9 GHz CKM cavity (from FEA)
4Detuning Sources
- Fast, small changes in cavity shape are caused by
two primary sources - Lorentz Forces (electromagnetic)
- Important for pulsed operation, high gradients
(e.g., 35 MV/m) - Highly repetitive
- Main detuning concern for ILC and Proton Driver
- Piezo compensation demonstrated at the Tesla Test
Facility - Microphonics (vibration sources)
- Important for cw operation, narrow bandwidth
- Random
- Microphonics compensation less advanced than
Lorentz - FNAL work at A0 contributed to advances in the
state of the art of microphonics detuning
compensation
5Detuning Compensation Fast Tuners
Fast tuners have been proposed for active
detuning control by applying a counteracting
force to the cavity
- PIEZOELECTRIC ACTUATORS
- Commercially available from multiple sources
- Typically used at room temperature
- Work at cryogenic temperatures with reduced
stroke. Characterization important - Actuator of choice in other labs for detuning
compensation studies
- MAGNETOSTRICTIVE ACTUATORS
- Being introduced as an alternative to
piezoelectric actuators for SCRF fast tuning - Newer technology for this application, single
source - Some labs are investigating this option
6Studies at 1.8 K3-cell 3.9 GHz CKM cavity
- Microphonics Spectrum with pumps ON and OFF
- Vibration measurements with piezo as a sensor
- Piezo-RF detuning transfer function
- Manual microphonics detuning piezo compensation
- Quench and hot spot location using thermometry
Temperature Rings
Piezo Actuator P-206-40 from Piezosystem Jena
7Manual Detuning Compensation
- Cavity system support was not optimized to
minimize microphonics - Microphonics spectrum shows a strong detuning
frequency at 30 Hz - Detuning compensation at 1.8 K was attempted by
manually adjusting the piezo frequency,
amplitude, and phase - Detuning was reduced by more than a factor of
three and maintained for several seconds - The result was reproducible, showing the
feasibility of using a piezo actuator to
compensate microphonics detuning
8Studies at Room TemperatureAutomatic
Microphonics Detuning Compensation
Piezo
- Automatic compensation with an adaptive
feedforward control method demonstrated in a
13-cell CKM cavity at room temperature. - For details, see
- R. Carcagno, L. Bellantoni, T. Berenc, H.
Edwards, D. Orris, A. Rowe, Microphonics
Detuning Compensation in 3.9 GHz Superconducting
RF Cavities, 11th Workshop on RF-Superconductivit
y SRF 2003.
9Detuning Compensation Results
- Automatic compensation demonstrated for three
induced frequencies (15 Hz, 27 Hz, and 45 Hz) - More than 20 dB attenuation
- Mechanical Resonances quickly identified by
driving piezo with white noise
10Piezo RD Next StepsILC and Proton Driver
Support
Capture Cavity 2 Tuner
- Piezo RD will continue with the HPTF Capture
Cavity 2 test - Integrate piezo with cavity tuner
- Start with DESY design
- Studies at 2 K for ILC and Proton Driver
- Lorentz detuning compensation
- Microphonic detuning compensation
- Piezo characterization and reliability under
operating conditions - Integrate piezo control with LLRF controls
- Evaluate Alternatives (e.g., magnetostrictive
actuators) - Increase collaboration efforts with other Labs
and institutions (e.g., DESY, ANL, JLab, Saclay,
etc)
Two Piezos
- Challenges
- Piezo mechanical integration with tuner (preload,
reliability) - Mechanical resonances (complicate control
algorithms) - Cost/space reduction for mass production and
industrialization (power amplifiers, piezo size)
11Fast Cavity Thermometry
New system based on smaller CERNOX sensors was
developed at FNAL Fast (10 kHz) temperature
acquisition rate to study quench evolution
- Traditional Carbon Glass RTDs used in SCRF
thermometry (e.g., Cornell system) too large for
small 3.9 GHz CKM cavity geometry
12Thermometry Results
- Quench location clearly identified
- Hot spot shifts 90 degrees with cw polarization
mode - Increasing RF power resulted in quench at hot
spot location
Lambda point
13Conclusions
- FNAL has already begun developing expertise in
areas of piezo tuning and cavity thermometry - RD in these areas has resulted in advances in
microphonics detuning compensation and the
ability to pinpoint quench location in small
cavities - The focus of this work is now shifting towards
ILC and Proton Driver support - Piezo tuning development work will continue with
the HPTF Capture Cavity 2 test - Fast tuning (e.g., piezo) capability is critical
for cost reduction efforts in high gradient SCRF
machines (high RF power efficiency)