Experimental study of rf pulsed heating

Cyclic thermal stresses produced by rf pulsed heating can be the limiting factor on the attainable reliable gradients for room temperature linear accelerators. This is especially true for structures that have complicated features for wakefield damping. These limits could be pushed higher by using sp...

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Main Authors: Lisa Laurent, Sami Tantawi, Valery Dolgashev, Christopher Nantista, Yasuo Higashi, Markus Aicheler, Samuli Heikkinen, Walter Wuensch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2011-04-01
Series:Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.041001
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spelling doaj-8ae5c734bbb143ba8a2d79e7448727082020-11-25T02:30:16ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams1098-44022011-04-0114404100110.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.041001Experimental study of rf pulsed heatingLisa LaurentSami TantawiValery DolgashevChristopher NantistaYasuo HigashiMarkus AichelerSamuli HeikkinenWalter WuenschCyclic thermal stresses produced by rf pulsed heating can be the limiting factor on the attainable reliable gradients for room temperature linear accelerators. This is especially true for structures that have complicated features for wakefield damping. These limits could be pushed higher by using special types of copper, copper alloys, or other conducting metals in constructing partial or complete accelerator structures. Here we present an experimental study aimed at determining the potential of these materials for tolerating cyclic thermal fatigue due to rf magnetic fields. A special cavity that has no electric field on the surface was employed in these studies. The cavity shape concentrates the magnetic field on one flat surface where the test material is placed. The materials tested in this study have included oxygen free electronic grade copper, copper zirconium, copper chromium, hot isostatically pressed copper, single crystal copper, electroplated copper, Glidcop®, copper silver, and silver plated copper. The samples were exposed to different machining and heat treatment processes prior to rf processing. Each sample was tested to a peak pulsed heating temperature of approximately 110°C and remained at this temperature for approximately 10×10^{6} rf pulses. In general, the results showed the possibility of pushing the gradient limits due to pulsed heating fatigue by the use of copper zirconium and copper chromium alloys.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.041001
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lisa Laurent
Sami Tantawi
Valery Dolgashev
Christopher Nantista
Yasuo Higashi
Markus Aicheler
Samuli Heikkinen
Walter Wuensch
spellingShingle Lisa Laurent
Sami Tantawi
Valery Dolgashev
Christopher Nantista
Yasuo Higashi
Markus Aicheler
Samuli Heikkinen
Walter Wuensch
Experimental study of rf pulsed heating
Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams
author_facet Lisa Laurent
Sami Tantawi
Valery Dolgashev
Christopher Nantista
Yasuo Higashi
Markus Aicheler
Samuli Heikkinen
Walter Wuensch
author_sort Lisa Laurent
title Experimental study of rf pulsed heating
title_short Experimental study of rf pulsed heating
title_full Experimental study of rf pulsed heating
title_fullStr Experimental study of rf pulsed heating
title_full_unstemmed Experimental study of rf pulsed heating
title_sort experimental study of rf pulsed heating
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams
issn 1098-4402
publishDate 2011-04-01
description Cyclic thermal stresses produced by rf pulsed heating can be the limiting factor on the attainable reliable gradients for room temperature linear accelerators. This is especially true for structures that have complicated features for wakefield damping. These limits could be pushed higher by using special types of copper, copper alloys, or other conducting metals in constructing partial or complete accelerator structures. Here we present an experimental study aimed at determining the potential of these materials for tolerating cyclic thermal fatigue due to rf magnetic fields. A special cavity that has no electric field on the surface was employed in these studies. The cavity shape concentrates the magnetic field on one flat surface where the test material is placed. The materials tested in this study have included oxygen free electronic grade copper, copper zirconium, copper chromium, hot isostatically pressed copper, single crystal copper, electroplated copper, Glidcop®, copper silver, and silver plated copper. The samples were exposed to different machining and heat treatment processes prior to rf processing. Each sample was tested to a peak pulsed heating temperature of approximately 110°C and remained at this temperature for approximately 10×10^{6} rf pulses. In general, the results showed the possibility of pushing the gradient limits due to pulsed heating fatigue by the use of copper zirconium and copper chromium alloys.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.041001
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