Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques

Recent experience with X-band accelerator structure development has shown the rf input coupler to be the region most prone to rf breakdown and degradation, effectively limiting the operating gradient. A major factor in this appears to be high magnetic fields at the sharp edges of the coupling irises...

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Main Authors: Christopher Nantista, Sami Tantawi, Valery Dolgashev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2004-07-01
Series:Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.7.072001
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spelling doaj-febdae8efa354a04b2e555185561a4322020-11-25T01:39:52ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams1098-44022004-07-017707200110.1103/PhysRevSTAB.7.072001Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniquesChristopher NantistaSami TantawiValery DolgashevRecent experience with X-band accelerator structure development has shown the rf input coupler to be the region most prone to rf breakdown and degradation, effectively limiting the operating gradient. A major factor in this appears to be high magnetic fields at the sharp edges of the coupling irises. As a first response to this problem, couplers with rounded and thickened iris horns have been employed and successfully tested at high power. To further reduce fields for higher power flow, conceptually new coupler designs have been developed, in which power is coupled through the broad wall of the feed waveguide, rather than through terminating irises. A “mode-launcher” coupler, which launches the TM_{01} mode in circular waveguide before coupling through a matching cell into the main structure, has been tested with great success. With peak surface fields below those in the body of the structure, this coupler represented a breakthrough in the Next Linear Collider structure program. The design of this coupler and of variations which use beam line space more efficiently are described here. The latter include a coupler in which power passes directly through an iris in the broad wall of the rectangular waveguide into a matching cell, also successfully implemented, and a variation which makes the waveguide itself an accelerating cell. We also discuss in some detail a couple of techniques for matching such couplers to traveling-wave structures using a field solver. The first exploits the cell number independence of a traveling-wave match, and the second optimizes using the fields of an internally driven structure.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.7.072001
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher Nantista
Sami Tantawi
Valery Dolgashev
spellingShingle Christopher Nantista
Sami Tantawi
Valery Dolgashev
Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques
Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams
author_facet Christopher Nantista
Sami Tantawi
Valery Dolgashev
author_sort Christopher Nantista
title Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques
title_short Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques
title_full Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques
title_fullStr Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques
title_full_unstemmed Low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques
title_sort low-field accelerator structure couplers and design techniques
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams
issn 1098-4402
publishDate 2004-07-01
description Recent experience with X-band accelerator structure development has shown the rf input coupler to be the region most prone to rf breakdown and degradation, effectively limiting the operating gradient. A major factor in this appears to be high magnetic fields at the sharp edges of the coupling irises. As a first response to this problem, couplers with rounded and thickened iris horns have been employed and successfully tested at high power. To further reduce fields for higher power flow, conceptually new coupler designs have been developed, in which power is coupled through the broad wall of the feed waveguide, rather than through terminating irises. A “mode-launcher” coupler, which launches the TM_{01} mode in circular waveguide before coupling through a matching cell into the main structure, has been tested with great success. With peak surface fields below those in the body of the structure, this coupler represented a breakthrough in the Next Linear Collider structure program. The design of this coupler and of variations which use beam line space more efficiently are described here. The latter include a coupler in which power passes directly through an iris in the broad wall of the rectangular waveguide into a matching cell, also successfully implemented, and a variation which makes the waveguide itself an accelerating cell. We also discuss in some detail a couple of techniques for matching such couplers to traveling-wave structures using a field solver. The first exploits the cell number independence of a traveling-wave match, and the second optimizes using the fields of an internally driven structure.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.7.072001
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