Title :
Room temperature accelerator structures for linear colliders
Author :
Miller, R.H. ; Jones, R.M. ; Adolphsen, C. ; Bowden, G. ; Dolgashev, V. ; Kroll, N. ; Li, Z. ; Loewen, R. ; Ng, C. ; Pearson, C. ; Raubenheimer, T. ; Ruth, R. ; Tantawi, S. ; Wang, J.W.
Author_Institution :
Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Menlo Park, CA, USA
Abstract :
Early tests of short low group velocity and standing wave structures indicated the viability of operating X-band linacs with accelerating gradients in excess of 100 MeV/m. Conventional scaling of traveling wave traveling wave linacs with frequency scales the cell dimensions with λ. Because Q scales as λ1/2, the length of the structures scale not linearly but as λ3/2 in order to preserve the attenuation through each structure. For the NLC we chose not to follow this scaling from the SLAC S-band linac to its fourth harmonic at the X-band. We wanted to increase the length of the structures to reduce the number of couplers and waveguide drives which can be a significant part of the cost of a microwave linac. Furthermore, scaling the iris size of the disk-loaded structures gave unacceptably high short range dipole wakefields. Consequently, we chose to go up a factor of about 5 in average group velocity and length of the structures, which increases the power fed to each structure by the same factor and decreases the short range dipole wakes by a similar factor. Unfortunately, these longer (1.8 m) structures have not performed nearly as well in high gradient tests as the short structures. We believe we have at least a partial understanding of the reason and will discuss it below. We are now studying two types of short structures with large apertures with moderately good efficiency including: 1) traveling wave structures with the group velocity lowered by going to large phase advance per period with bulges on the iris, 2) π mode standing wave structures
Keywords :
accelerator RF systems; beam handling equipment; electron accelerators; electron beams; linear colliders; particle beam stability; wakefield accelerators; 1.8 m; NLC; SLAC S-band linac; X-band linacs; accelerating gradients; beam attenuation; cell dimensions; disk-loaded structures; frequency scales; high gradient tests; high short range dipole wakefields; iris size; linear colliders; microwave linac; room temperature accelerator structures; short low group velocity; standing wave structures; structure length; traveling wave traveling wave linacs; waveguide drives; Attenuation; Costs; Couplers; Frequency; Iris; Life estimation; Linear accelerators; Temperature; Testing; Waveguide components;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 2001. PAC 2001. Proceedings of the 2001
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7191-7
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.2001.988264