Title: A compendium of e-cloud studies at PSR
1A compendium of e-cloud studies at PSR
- Robert Macek, LANL, 3/15-18/04
2Outline for this topic
- Introduction
- Electron cloud (EC) diagnostics used at PSR
- Studies of beam parameters affecting EC formation
- Beam intensity
- Longitudinal and transverse beam profiles
- Beam in gap
- High frequency longitudinal structure
- Coherent beam centroid motion
- Electron cloud dissipation
- Studies of sources of seed electrons
- Losses
- Vacuum
- Stripper foil
- Bursts, recovery from sweeping
- Studies of electron suppression
- Clearing fields
- TiN coatings
- Weak solenoids
- Beam Scrubbing
3PSR Layout with EC Diagnostic
Circumference 90m Beam energy 798
MeV Revolution frequency 2.8 MHz Bunch length
250 ns (63 m) Accumulation time 750 ms
2000 turns
4Sources of primary electrons at PSR
Source
es/stored p
- 400 keV convoy electrons from H- stripping
2 - Secondaries from convoy es
0.1 - 1 - Secondary emission from foil (0.02/traversal)
0.6-1 - Knock-on electrons from foil
0.2 - Thermionic emission from foil
lt0.1 - Secondary emission from beam losses (0.1-100/
lost proton)
0.001- 1 - Residual gas ionization (2-4x10-8 torr)
lt0.01 - gt2.7-5.2
Depends strongly on accumulation, store time and
injection setup
Very strong function of foil heating, usually
not present in production operations but can be
made large in beam experiments
5Mechanism 2 trailing edge multipactor
Electron born at wall from say losses
Beam
Energy gain in one traversalis high enough for
multiplication
Energy gain is possible in wall-to-wall
traversals on trailing part of beam pulse
Bk87, p111
6Mechanism 1 production by captured electrons
7Electron motion in simple case
- Electron subject to cylindrically symmetric
radial force and has no initial angular momentum - Equation of motion is
- Assume Gaussian transverse beam profile with line
density ?(zbct) - Solve resulting equation of motion numerically
for
8Amplification by trailing edge multipactor in a
simple model
9Electron Cloud Diagnostics used at PSR
10Outline of discussion on e-cloud diagnostics at
PSR
- Cloud parameters of interest
- Electron density distribution as function of
time, and 6 phase space coordinates of electrons - Source strengths of various sources of electrons
- Much can be learned from flux striking the wall,
its time structure and energy spectrum - Retarding Field Analyzer (RFA)
- Flux striking the wall
- Time structure
- Energy spectrum of electrons striking the wall
- Electron Sweeping Detector (ESD)
- RFA with pulsed electrode to sweep low energy es
into the RFA - Biased collection electrodes
- Foil current
- Vacuum pressure rise
- Fast ion gauge
- Ion pump current pulse
11Retarding Field Analyzer
- Described in R. Rosenberg and K. Harkay, NIM A
453 (2000) p507-513. - LANL augmentation is fast electronics (80 MHz)
on the collector output - Minimal perturbation of beam/wall environment
- Use of repeller permits collecting a cumulative
energy spectrum - Measures electrons striking the wall, not
electrons remaining in the pipe
12RFA Electronics Block Diagram
13Electron signals from RFA in straight section 4
- RFA signal has contributions from trailing edge
multipactor and captured electrons released at
end of beam pulse plus their secondaries - Key issue is how many electrons survive the gap
to be captured by the beam
Signals averaged for 32 beam macropulses, 8
mC/pulse beam intensity, device is labeled ED42Y,
Transimpedance 3.5 k?, opening 1 cm2
Bk95, p6-12
14Electron energy cumulative spectrum (3D profile)
15Comparison with simulations
- Code such as POSINST developed by Furman and used
by him and Pivi to simulate the multipacting
process and produce flux and energy distribution
of electrons striking the wall in PSR - Code and simulation ingredients
- 2D space charge field of a rigid proton beam with
measured longitudinal beam profile and Gaussian
transverse profile (?x ?y1cm) - Electrons move in 3D under influence of 2D space
charge field of protons and 3D field of electrons - Detailed model of secondary emission at the wall
- Seed electrons were assumed to be from uniform
losses at the wall - 100 es per lost proton
- Proton loss rate 4x10-6 per stored proton per
turn for an 8 mC/pulse beam
M. Furman and M Pivi, PAC01, also PRSTAB 034201
16Electron sweeping detector
17Electron Sweeping Diagnostic (ESD)
- Designed by A. Browman to measure e-cloud
surviving passage of the gap - Short HV (1kV) pulse is applied to electrode to
sweep electrons into RFA
Cross-section
Pulsed Electrode Network
18Acceptance of ESD
- Acceptance mapped by calculating trajectories for
thousands of initial positions on a grid in the
pipe and selecting those that entered the arc of
RFA box - zero initial velocity (cold electrons)
Collection Region
Potentials and Trajectories
19Sample Electron Data from Electron Sweeper
- Signals have been timed correctly to the beam
pulse - Prompt electrons strike the wall peak at the
end of the beam pulse. Contributions from - Trailing edge multipactor
- Captured electrons released at end of beam pulse
- Device basically acts a large area RFA until HV
pulse applied - 10 ns transit time delay between HV pulse and
swept electron signal is expected - Swept electron signal is narrow (10 ns) with a
tail that is not completely understood
7.7 mC/pulse, bunch length 280 ns, 30 ns
injection notch, signals averaged for 32
macropulses, repeller - 25V, HV pulse 500V
Bk 98, p 51
20Electron cloud dissipation (swept electrons in
pipe vs time after end of beam pulse )
- Early results from electron sweeper for 5mC/pulse
looking just after extraction - Peak signal or integral have essentially the same
shape curve - Long exponential tail seen with 170 ns decay
time - Still see electrons after 1 ms
- Implies a high secondary yield (reflectivity) for
low energy electrons (2-5 eV) - Implies neutralization lower limit of 1.5 based
on swept electrons signal at the end of the
100ns gap
Bk xx, p yy
21Picture of installed RFA and electron sweeper
22Biased collection electrodes
23Biased collection electrodes
- We have tried a variety of biased electrodes over
the last decade - parallel and curve plates, BPM striplines, split
cylinders etc in drift regions, quadrupoles and
thin striplines in a dipole - various combinations of bias fields
- Many puzzling features emerged during their use
- Peculiar voltage plateau curves
- Electrons seen in the plane transverse to a
dipole field - Complicated situation to interpret
- Signal is net charge collected i.e., incoming
outgoing (secondary emission) - Bias electric field dominates during the gap
passage and can collect electrons during the gap - Beam electric field dominates during bunch
passage - Electrodes in the pipe see large induced signals
(100-200 V) from coupling to the beam that must
be filtered out to see the electron cloud signal - Biased electrodes change the beam-wall
environment and can alter the multipacting
process - An detailed simulation of cloud formation in
presence of bias electric fields could be
compared with observations and might provide some
insight - They did provide our first evidence for a flood
of electrons for high intensity beams - RFA and electron sweeper are better devices for
measuring the electron cloud
24Biased Strips in a Dipole
- 4 copper strips on kaptan tube (0.010 thick)
- Leads brought out through the nearby quad to
vacuum feed throughs - Vertical and horizontal connected in pairs
- One set biased
- The other grounded
- Signal is heavily filtered to suppress large
induced AC signals from beam (up to 100 V) - Signal is integrated by the filter
25Sample signal from strips in dipole
26Biased Strips in Dipole at 7.6 mC/pulse
27Biased Strips in Dipole at 3.8 mC
28Electron Signal from Biased BPM Striplines in Quad
29Foil current
30Foil current
- Net current from foil is due to secondary
emission - Under conditions of more foil heating also see
thermionic emission current
5 mC/pulse Production beam
cm42
foil
8 mC/pulse beam with 200 ms store
cm42
foil
31Vacuum pressure rise as an e-cloud diagnostic
32Pressure rise for high intensity stable beam (May
2000)22
Electron Signal from RFA (ED42Y)
Fast ion gauge signal (installed in a RFA port
ED42X)
Pressure change from 4x10-9 Torr to 3.5x10-8
Torr, rise time 8 ms, decay time 0.5 s
Bk 94, p 95
33Vacuum Pressure Rise from electron cloud
- Electron Stimulated Desorption (ESD) by e-cloud
striking the vacuum chamber wall - Pressure rise ( 8ms) on previous slide is
consistent with conductance of 10 cm beam pipe
and housing of ion gauge - Pressure decay (0.3-0.5 s) is consistent with
conductance of 10 cm beam pipe and pumping speed
of 500 L pumps - Pressure rise implies we would have a problem at
20 or 30 Hz - Implies pressure would be 10-6 Torr
- Beam scrubbing since 2000 reduces it
considerably(factor of 10) - Pressure rise compared with electron flux hitting
the walls implies 1 molecule desorbed per 70
electrons hitting the wall - Consistent with ESD cross-section 10-17 cm2 and
coverage of 1 (full monolayer)
34 Ion pump current pulse
- A vacuum pressure rise was historically one of
the first indicators for beam-induced
multipacting - Multipacting electrons striking the wall desorb
gases - An ion pump current pulse is observed during
accumulation of intense beam pulses in PSR - Pulse amplitude tracks the peak RFA signal
amplitude e.g., - When it changes with beam intensity
- As the cloud diminishes over time with beam
scrubbing - Simple diagnostic to implement
Gas pulse for 8 mC/pulse stable beam
35SRIP11 Ion Pump Pulse Current (7.1 mC/pulse,
10/04/03)
ED22Y filtered signal
IP11 pulse, 1ms decay time
Bk 103, p 95
36Correlation of Ion Pump Pulse (IP13) with nearest
Electron Signal (ED22Y) (effect of beam
intensity)
8 mC/pulse 6/29/02
ED22Y Signal Amplitudes at end of accumulation
and store
5 mC
8 mC
5 mC/pulse 6/29/02
Ratio of ED22Y Amp. (8mC/5mC) 4.7
Ratio of IP13 Amp. (8mC/5mC) 5.1
Ion pump pulse scales with beam intensity the
same as the RFA signals
Bk 94, p 95
37Correlation of Ion Pump Pulse with Electron
Signal and beam scrubbing
38Pump signal at various locations in PSR
8 mC/pulse beam _at_ 1Hz, 6/29/02
39Comparison of data 11/28/03 with 6/29/02
40Ion Pump layout
SRIP11
Screened Pump Port
41Model for ion pump pulse
- ESD gas molecules are estimated to come off with
0.2 eV - Those with line of sight to pump interior will
arrive in 50 250 ms (at typical pump),
depending on molecular weight. - Some multipacting electrons may also get through
the screen and desorb gas closer to the pump
interior. - Sorption pumping speed of interior of pump is
4000 l/s - Implies decay of 35/4000 or 1ms
- Bulk of desorbed gas is thermalized and pumped
through conductance limited beam pipe by 400 l/s
ion pumps - Decay time of 0.3-0.5 s
Pumping Screens
Beam
Desorbed molecule
Anode
e.g. N2O on Ru see Z.W. Gortel and Z.
Wierzbicki, Phys. Rev. B 43 (1991) 7487.
42Other evidence pertinent to this model
- No signals where line-of-sight is blocked (IP02,
IP31, IP32) - Strong signal at IP52
- 15 cm beam pipe, only one screen
- Short drop (larger solid angle)
- Changes with added store time
- Pump signal tracks electron detector signal
- As intensity changes
- Over time (beam scrubbing)
- Another possibility is that multipacting
electrons reach the ion pump innards and desorb
gas to generate the observed ion pump pulse - SLAC people believe they see electron cloud
getting into ion pumps - Electrons must have enough energy to get through
the magnetic fields at the entrance to the pump
43Layouts for Ion Pumps IP02 and IP51/52
IP02 at Stripper Foil Location
IP51/52 layout
44Summary of PSR e-cloud diagnostics
- The RFA and ESD are our most useful EC
diagnostics and have provided immensely useful
information on the EC in PSR - RFA provides data on flux, energy spectra and
time structure of electrons striking the wall
with minimal perturbation of the EC - ESD is an RFA that can also measure electrons
swept from a beam-free time interval - Biased electrode signals provide some information
but are difficult to understand and interpret - Only devices we have in magnetic field regions
- Ion pump gas pulse signal provides a useful
relative measure of gas desorption and correlates
well with other measures of the EC - Simple to implement
- More informative than the DC average pump current
- Provides good sampling over all regions of the
ring - Foil current measures secondary and thermionic
emission from foil
45Results of various e-cloud studies at PSR
46Studies of beam parameters affecting EC formation
- Beam intensity
- Longitudinal and transverse beam profiles
- Beam in gap
- High frequency longitudinal structure
- Coherent beam centroid motion
47Prompt and Swept Electrons vs Beam Intensity
Bk 98, p 132-3
48Swept and Prompt es vs intensity (near
threshold)
Bk 99, p 72-8
49Comparison
50Saturated Swept and Prompt es vs local losses
Bk 98, p 142-3
51Influence of Bunch Shape
- From changing buncher phase
- From use of notch in injected bunch
- Effect of transverse beam shape
52Electron signals vs bunch shape
- Data obtained for 7.4 mC/pulse beam
Bk95, p38
53Comparison of effect of bunch shape at two
locations
54Comparison to Beam Injected with 50 ns Notch
- Inductors at 190º C, enough inductance to
over-compensate longitudinal space charge by
50 - Use 50 ns notch in 305 ns injected pulse
- Stored intensity down 16
- Bunching factor up 50
- Losses down a factor of 2
- Electrons up 10-20
WallCurrentMonitor
Bk92, p123-132
55Influence of transverse beam profile
spot size estimates ?y 11 mm, ?x 5 mm
56Effect of added beam in the gap
57Effect of Added Beam in the Gap on Instability
Threshold
Bk70, p 76-92
58Effect on e-cloud of 1 added beam-in-the gap
- Added beam in the gap by injecting a number of
turns (2) with no 2.8 MHz chopping at the end of
accumulation - Give beam in gap that is 1 of peak
- Measured beam in gap and prompt and swept
e-signals for 7 mC/pulse beam intensity
Bk 99, p 14-8
59Comparison of prompt es with and without beam in
gap
- 7.1 mC/pulse beam intensity
- Both traces have the same beam parameters except
for beam in gap - See a factor of 3 more prompt es with beam in
gap - Somewhat surprising that it is this large
Bk 99, p 14-8
60Swept and prompt es with beam in gap
- Recovery behavior basically unchanged with added
beam in gap - See larger e-signals than without beam in gap,
however - Quantitative comparison compromised by
significant change in beam pulse shape unrelated
to beam in the gap and not discovered until after
the experiment was analyzed - Data from another day showed a factor 2-3 more
swept es for 1 beam in gap - More or less consistent with the expectation that
swept es would increase to neutralize beam added
to the gap - More less explains effect on instability
threshold shown earlier
Bk 99, p 14-8
61Effect of high frequency longitudinal structure
62Longitudinal instability appears at low buncher
voltage
- At low intensity (2.8 mC/pulse) production beams
and for low buncher voltage, we see a
microwave-like longitudinal instability that is
correlated with a large increase in prompt es
and bursts - Signals below are for single accumulated
macropulse (no averaging)
Bk 99, p 40-1
63Large increase in es when longitudinal
structure appears
- Data below for low intensity, production beam
(2.8 mC/pulse) - Have bursts but data below is averaged over 128
repeated macropulses
Bk 99, p 40-1
64Standard Deviation of RFA signals
- Standard deviation (s) bin-by-bin is a
convenient, quantitative measure of fluctuations
from the bursts - s is the same size as the average
- Data below for 2.8 mC/pulse production beam
Bk 99, p 40-1
65Effect of coherent beam motion
66Prompt electron signal for unstable beam
- Data (1999) for 4.4 mC store, higher intensity
saturated detector electronics - E-signal much larger (gt10) than for stable beam
of same intensity - Electron pulse shape (at end of each turn) is
similar to stable pulses
Bk91, p48
67Unstable beam expanded
Bk 91, p 48
68Unstable beam turn-by-turn
Bk 91, p 48
69Electron cloud dissipation
70Studies of electron cloud dissipation after beam
pulse passes
- Cloud at end of gap is key to understanding the
e-p instability in PSR - These are captured by the next pulse and
oscillate against the protons during the bunch
passage and thus can drive the instability - Have measured dissipation as function of beam
intensity, conditioning, TiN coating and in the
extraction line (single pass) - Have found that the decay time is 200 ns and
insensitive to all of these variables - Implies that d ? 0.5 for low energy electrons
(lt20 eV) which is surprisingly high and
insensitive to conditioning and TiN coatings
71Electron survival vs intensity
Contemporaneous electron dissipation curves at 3
beam intensities. Data was collected 8/24/02.
72Electron survival at various beam intensities
Swept electron survival curves (ES41Y) at various
intensities including a 2.7 mC/pulse data set
collected during production running at reduced
intensity (55 mA at 20 Hz.)
73Studies of the sources of seed electrons
- Crucial input for simulations of what we can
measure at PSR - Issues regarding the source terms
- Losses
- Vacuum
- Stripper foil
74Some complications regarding seed electrons from
losses
- Trailing edge multipactor has highest gain for
electrons born near the wall at peak of beam
pulse - Assumption that initial es are from grazing
angle losses, uniformly distributed around the
ring with 100 e/lost proton is a good first
approximation but likely too simplistic for
accurate simulations of PSR experiments - The 100e/proton comes from model by Sternglass
for grazing angle (cos ? lt0.002) scrapping at a
surface and is supported by measurements of
Thieberger etal
e/proton goes with cos(?)-1
- Losses are anything but uniform, rate can vary by
factor of 1000 around the ring - Grazing angle losses occur mainly in the quads
(10 of circumference) and here it is mostly
confined to those in the region of injection and
extraction (25 of the quads) - Only scattered beam reaches the regions where
electron detectors are located (drift spaces).
This strikes the walls at 10s of mr. - e/scattered particle down factor 10 or more
- Electrons from residual gas ionization are often
neglected as being few in number and born near
the beam not at the walls
75 PSR Layout
Circumference 90m Beam energy 798
MeV Revolution frequency 2.8 MHz Bunch length
250 ns (63 m) Accumulation time 750 ms
2000 turns
76Ring Beam Loss and Activation
- Ring losses are from
- Foil scattering (60-70)
- Nuclear and Large Angle Coulomb
- Lost in sect 0, 1 and at extraction region
- Production of excited states of H0 (n3,4..) that
field strip part way into first dipole d.s. of
stripper - Lost in first 2-3 sections after foil
- Ring Losses concentrated at injection and
extraction - Ring Loss Monitors
- Max 22.4
- Min 0.2
- Ratio Max/Min 112
- Ring Activation _at_ 30 cm
- Max 5000 mRad/h
- Min 10 mRad/h
- Ratio Max/Min 500
77Other Problems with Uniform Loss Model
- We consistently see more prompt electrons in
section 4 than in sections 2 and 9 where losses
are considerably higher - What could be different?
- Loss monitor signal and activation may not track
local seed electron production very well - SEY is not measured, hence something of an
unknown for the simulations - Transverse profile of the beam
- Vacuum (section 4 is worse by factor of 5-10)
section Ratio of electrons to section 4 Ratio of losses to section 4 Ratio of activation to section 4
9 1/3 17 7 - 35
2 1/2.5 7 2
1 6 55 50
78Experiments on effect of beam losses and vacuum
- Changed beam losses two ways
- Move stripper foil into the beam
- Changes amount of foil scattering but all other
beam parameters fixed - Monitor foil current
- Introduce local closed orbit bumps, measure
losses with local loss monitor (scintillator with
10 ns resolution, if desired) - Find that prompt electron signal in RFA is linear
in losses over considerable range - Changed vacuum in several sections by turning off
ion pumps - Find that prompt electron signal in RFA is linear
over range of 10-1000 nTorr - Electrons surviving the gap
- Note that ions from residual gas ionization are
driven to the wall in 1-3 turns and hit with 2
keV. These can create secondaries electrons at
the wall. Effect not in simulations.
79Effect of losses (moving foil into beam)
5.8 mC/pulse beam
Bk 100, p 68-75
80Effect of changing losses by local bump
Signals from horizontal and vertical RFAs plotted
as function of local loss monitor as horizontal
bump was varied from -6 to 8 mm.Beam intensity
was 8.1 mC/pulse
Bk 98, p 142-63
81Effect of changing vacuum pressure in Sect 4
8.2 mC/pulse beam intensity
Bk 101, p 10-13
82Effect of changing vacuum pressure in Sect 2 5
At beam intensity of 8.2 mC/pulse
Bk 101, p 10-13
83Seed electrons from the foil
- Data showing effect of stripped electrons
- Data showing effect of thermionic emission
84Effect of electrons stripped at foil
ED02X downstream of foil
Expanded Near EOI
85Summary of seed electron issue
- Beam losses certainly are a source of seed
electrons for trailing edge multipactor - Need simulation studies of angle that scattered
particles (scattered from losses in quads) make
with walls in drift spaces and downstream
elements - Vacuum pressure above 10-7 Torr makes a
significant contribution - Is it from ions driven to the wall?
- Need to know precisely the angle scattered
radiation makes with chamber walls in elements
downstream of local losses - LAHET or MCNPX simulations?
- We see stripped electrons and secondaries from
the foil influencing the ED02X signal but the
situation is complicated by the change in chamber
geometry at this detector and the distance from
the stripper foil
86Electron bursts, recovery from sweeping
87Electron burst phenomenon (110 turns)
Bk 98, p 53
88What can cause burst phenomena for prompt es?
- Fluctuations in the seed electrons
- local losses dont seem to be strongly
implicated - Correlations of ED42Y and ED92Y suggest that it
might be fluctuations on the beam but dont see
anything obvious on wall current monitor signal
above 4-5 mC/pulse - Situation changes at lower intensity (i.e 3
mC/pulse) - See sudden increase in es as buncher voltage is
lowered (also no added store time) - Beam stable transversely during accumulation
while below the standard threshold definition
(which uses 500 ms store) - See a microwave-like longitudinal instability and
some evidence for beam in gap
89Correlations of bursts in sec 4 and 9
Bk 99, p 102
90Recovery after Clearing Gap of electrons
Bk 98, p 50-1
91Correlations in Recovery
Bk xx, p yy
92Possible explanations for recovery phenomenon
- Captured electrons (mechanism 1) may be more
important than indicated by simulations - Sub-threshold coherent motion may be playing a
role
93Mechanism 1 production by captured electrons
94Electron cloud varies with location in the ring
- Section 4 and 9 are rather similar
- Section 0 near the stripper foil has the most
flux but - intensity dependence of the prompt es is much
different, varies as the 1.5 to 2nd power of
intensity and not as n 7 - bursts are greatly reduced at this location
- Many more seed electrons from the processes at
the stripper foil - Lots of es seen in dipoles and quads using
biased collection plates but lacking the details
obtained from RFA or e-sweeper - Highest pressure rise associated with inductor
region of section 5 - Seems reasonable to assume that line density of
es surviving the gap in section 4 represent a
lower limit on the average density around the ring
95Studies of electron suppression
96Studies of suppressing electron generation
- Previous studies (prior to direct H- injection
upgrade) using electrostatic clearing fields in
the injection section and 3 other straight
sections showed a slight improvement in
instability threshold (10-20) - TiN coatings gave mixed results
- suppressed prompt electrons by a factor of 100
or more in tests in section 5 of PSR in 1999, - perhaps a factor of 40 in section 9 but
- no improvement in section 4 in 2002 tests
- Weak solenoid magnetic field suppressed prompt
electrons by factor of 50 in a 0.5 m section in
PSR - Beam conditioning over time reduced prompt
electron signals and improved the instability
threshold curves - Do the swept electrons change with conditioning?
- Lower beam losses and better vacuum ?
97Electron Clearing Devices in Injection Section
(Pre H- Injection Upgrade)
98Effect of TiN Coating on Electron Flux (1999 test)
Bk xx, p yy
99 Picture of Solenoid Section with
RFA
Bk 98, p 27-8
100RFA Signals in a Weak Solenoid Field
Bk 98, p 27-8
101Effect of Solenoid on RFA Signal Amplitude
Bk 98, p 27-8
102Summary of Beam Scrubbing at PSR
Effect on e-p instability threshold curves
103Electron suppression has not yet provided a cure
for e-p at PSR
- In 2002 tried weak solenoids over 10 of the
circumference in drift spaces with no effect on
instability threshold - Beam scrubbing in 2000-2001 was effective in
improving e-p instability threshold and has
continued to reduce prompt electrons in 2002 and
2003 but no improvement in e-p threshold in
2002/3 - Experience with TiN gave mixed results
104Summary/Conclusions
- Trailing edge multipactor is clearly responsible
for much of the prompt electron signal in the
drift spaces - Low energy electrons dissipate rather slowly in
beam free regions such as the gap between bunch
passages - Now have better knowledge of electrons surviving
the gap - To complete the picture we need data in dipoles
and quads - Simulate biased electrodes to interpret data
- Have some ideas on detectors but now resources
- Simulations are hampered by uncertainties on SEY
for actual surfaces and the source terms for seed
electrons esp from losses - TiN coatings gave mixed results on electron
suppression, why? - Effect of beam scrubbing (conditioning) on e-p
threshold intensity curves is our best evidence
that global e-cloud suppression is a cure for e-p
instability - Have a lot of data on effect of various factors
on e-cloud formation which could be compared with
simulations - Bunch shape changes, beam in gap, beam intensity
etc
105Remaining Issues and ideas for the future work
- Seed electron source terms are a troubling issue
that needs work - Simulations of the scattered radiation from
primary loss points to get the distributions of
scattered particles striking the walls downstream
would be very informative and a needed input to
the cloud formation simulations - Various simulations for quads seem to be in some
disagreement - Suitable RFA and sweeping detectors for quads and
dipoles would provide important test of the
simulations - Have some design ideas
- Cloud buildup simulations with biased collection
electrodes included and measurable quantities
simulated could be tested with existing and new
data from these detectors - L. Wang was planning to do this for the PSR
pinger electrodes
106Proposed sweeping detector for PSR quad
107Simulations for e-cloud in PSR quad
Courtesy M. Pivi
108Snapshot of e-cloud in quad 5 ms after beam
passage
Courtesy M. Pivi
109Backups
110scope pictures of charge collection
Coasting beam
Bunched beam
LB62, p. 30
LB62, p. 16
111 PSR Layout with EC Diagnostics
Circumference 90m Beam energy 798
MeV Revolution frequency 2.8 MHz Bunch length
250 ns (63 m) Accumulation time 750 ms
2000 turns
112RFA electronics
113Experimental studies of factors affecting e-cloud
formation
- Beam intensity has strong effect
- Longitudinal bunch shape, transverse beam profile
- Variation in primary (seed) electrons
- Losses, vacuum, foil emission
- Changes in SEY at chamber walls
- TiN coating
- Beam Scrubbing
- Beam in gap
- Circulating beam vs single pass
- High frequency longitudinal beam structure
- Weak solenoidal fields
- Coherent motion of beam centroid
- Location in ring
114Do the swept e-data complete the picture?
- A roughly constant 1-2 neutralization was main
missing ingredient - Saturation of swept e-s explains why increasing
the seed electrons by losses, high vacuum
doesnt change the threshold - Is the picture complete?
- Model doesnt have a threshold dependence on
bunch length - Do the electron bursts need to be explained?
- How would they be expected to impact the
instability? - Interesting new and not well-explained data from
other electron experiments - Do these need to be explained beyond the academic
interest? - Order of magnitude more prompt electrons
generated by unstable motion - Recovery after sweeping the gap
- Effect of added beam in the gap
- Influence of microwave-like longitudinal
instability at low buncher voltage - Behavior just below threshold
115Conditioning effect
Bk95, p125-7