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US Particle Accelerator School Sub-committee Report: Basic Energy Sciences Facilities Prioritization William A. Barletta Director, United States Particle.

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Presentation on theme: "US Particle Accelerator School Sub-committee Report: Basic Energy Sciences Facilities Prioritization William A. Barletta Director, United States Particle."— Presentation transcript:

1 US Particle Accelerator School Sub-committee Report: Basic Energy Sciences Facilities Prioritization William A. Barletta Director, United States Particle Accelerator School Department of Physics, MIT

2 US Particle Accelerator School Members of Subcommittee on BES Facilities Prioritization John Hemminger (co-chair)University of California-Irvine William Barletta (co-chair)MIT Simon BareUOP Gordon BrownStanford University John SpenceArizona State Ernie HallGE Global Research Bill McCurdyLBNL/Universiry of California-Davis John TranquadaBNL Doug TobiasUniversity of California-Irvine Sunil Sinha Rob McQueeny University of California-San Diego Ames Laboratory Tony RollettCarnegie Mellon Monica Olvera de la CruzNorthwestern Gary RubloffUniversity of Maryland Keith MoffattUniversity of Chicago Rob DimeoNIST

3 US Particle Accelerator School Charge to the committee  Provide input for a 10-year prioritization of scientific facilities in their respective programs from 2014 to 2024  Basis for characterization 1.Ability of the facility to contribute to world-leading science 2.Readiness of the facility for construction  What to consider 1.Present & proposed facilities listed by BES 2.Potential facilities that require a minimum investment of $100 M  Provide a report that assigns each facility to a category & provides a short justification for that categorization Do not rank order the facilities

4 US Particle Accelerator School Ability of the facility to contribute to world-leading science (2014- 2024)  Would it answer the most important scientific questions  Could other facilities answer these questions;  Would it contribute to many areas of research  Would the facility address needs of the broad community of users including those supported by other agencies  What is the level of user demand  Place each facility or upgrade in one of 4 categories: 1.Absolutely central 2.Important 3.Lower priority 4.Don't know enough yet

5 US Particle Accelerator School Readiness for construction  Has the concept of the facility been formally studied  What is the level of confidence that the technical challenges involved in building the facility can be met  Is the R&D performed to date sufficient to assure technical feasibility  Is the cost to build & operate the facility understood  Place each facility in one of three categories: 1.ready to initiate construction; 2.significant scientific/engineering challenges to resolve before initiating construction 3.mission and technical requirements not yet fully defined

6 US Particle Accelerator School Briefings to the sub-committee  APS & APS-U Eric Isaacs (ANL)  NSLS & NSLS-IISteve Dierker (BNL)  SSRL, LCLS, & LCLS-II Chi-Chang Kao (SLAC)  ALS & NGLSPaul Alivisatos (LBNL)  HIFAR, SNS & Second Target Station Thom Mason (ORNL)  Lujan Neutron Scattering Center Mark Bourke (LANL)  Center for Functional Nanomaterials Emilio Mendez (BNL)  Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies David Morris (LANL)  Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences Sean Smith (ORNL)  Center for Nanoscale Materials Amanda Petford-Long (ANL)  Molecular Foundry Omar Yaghi (LBNL) Facilities also submitted written input to the sub-committee

7 US Particle Accelerator School Characterization of Existing Facilities

8 US Particle Accelerator School Advance Light Source  ALS has a world-wide reputation for excellence in the use of soft X-ray synchrotron radiation science  Strong user demand & high productivity with strong impact  ALS is a leader in developing tools for soft X-ray science  Strong international competition The ALS is “important” to US “world-leading science”

9 US Particle Accelerator School Advanced Photon Source  Leading US source for hard X- rays  Optimized for very bright x ‐ rays in medium (2 ‐ 15 keV) & hard ( >15 keV) energy ranges  Large user demand (>5000 users)  Strong competition from European & Japanese light sources The APS is “absolutely central” to US “world-leading science”

10 US Particle Accelerator School National Synchrotron Light Source  Long history of high productivity and high impact  Large user demand  Diverse Capabilities over Broad Spectral Range  Will cease operations no later than Sep, 2014  Operations at Brookhaven will transfer to NSLS-II NSLS operation is “lower priority” for US “world-leading science”

11 US Particle Accelerator School National Synchrotron Light Source-II  Large, ultra-low emittance ring  Capable of housing 50 beamlines  30 are presently under development  Potential to be best in class from IR to hard X-rays  Short pulse operation (~15 ps rms)  On schedule for early completion in June, 2014  Presently – 85% complete NSLS-II is “absolutely central” to US “world-leading science”

12 US Particle Accelerator School Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource  Mid-energy x-ray synchrotron user facility  In 2004, successfully completed a major upgrade  Exciting potential for sub-ps X-rays  ~1600 users with high user satisfaction  Operational synergies with LCLS SSRL is “important” to US “world-leading science”

13 US Particle Accelerator School Linac Coherent Light Source  World’s first hard X-ray FEL  A stunning success for US science  Uses last third of SLAC linac  Highly over-subscribed  (~25% get beam time)  60% of papers in high impact journals LCLS is “absolutely central” to US “world-leading science”

14 US Particle Accelerator School Spallation Neutron Source  World’s highest power spallation source  Highly competitive in machine capability  Neutron instruments in US are far fewer than in Europe  Steady growth in users  Significant headroom for power upgrade SNS is “absolutely central” to US “world-leading science”

15 US Particle Accelerator School High Flux Isotope Reactor  Nation’s highest flux continuous neutron beams  99% reliability operations  An exceptional resource for materials irradiation & neutron activation analysis  Significant national security usage  Continuing mission in isotope production HFIR is “important” to US “world-leading science”

16 US Particle Accelerator School Lujan Neutron Scattering Center  Strongly leverages NNSA investment in LANSCE  Extra capability & capacity is helpful  Neutron instruments in US are far fewer than in Europe  Accessories not at the other facilities  high field, high pressure, plutonium, irradiate materials  exploited the sample environments, in situ strain is unique  important but not essential LNSC is “lower priority” for US “world-leading science”

17 US Particle Accelerator School Characterization of Nanoscience Research Centers

18 US Particle Accelerator School General comments  Nanoscience Research Centers add high value through twin missions of pursuing top-quality science and enabling the same for external users through access to NSRC facilities and/or collaboration with NSRC researchers.  They are commended for the quality of their research, strong connections to relevant research centers, & their successes in enabling successes of external users.  The committee identified particular value in synergies  between science programs of NSRC researchers,  special facilities they develop,  benefits available to users

19 US Particle Accelerator School Center for Nanoscale Materials (ANL)  CNM exploits the hard x-ray nanoprobe at APS  a unique facility - for a host of collaborations with key industry labs as well as universities  Excellent access to environmental nanoprobes CNM is “absolutely central” for US “world-leading science”

20 US Particle Accelerator School Center for Functional Nanomaterials (BNL)  World class TEM capabilities.  Plans in place for strong coupling with NSLS II CFN is “important” for US “world-leading science”

21 US Particle Accelerator School The Molecular Foundry (LBNL)  Strong cross-disciplinary portfolio to support users in one building  Enable staff & users to take their projects all the way to screening & prototyping.  Very strong chemical synthesis of nanoscale materials integrated with characterization/measurements  Well coupled to leadership scale computing platform at LBNL & to ALS The Molecular Foundry is “absolutely central” for US “world-leading science”

22 US Particle Accelerator School Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences (ORNL)  Excellent in theory & scanning probes  Well coupled to leadership scale computing platform at ORNL CNMS is “important” for US “world-leading science”

23 US Particle Accelerator School  Creates a growing number of Discovery Platforms  Uses SNL MESA facility & CINT labs, as new MEMS-based science platforms readily delivered to users or employed in collaborations with CINT scientists.  Unique capability for user platforms Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies (SNL/LANL) CINT is “absolutely central” for US “world-leading science”

24 US Particle Accelerator School Sub-committee characterization of Proposed Upgrades & Facilities

25 US Particle Accelerator School Advanced Photon Source Upgrade  Keeps US capabilities highly competitive with hard X-ray facilities in Europe & Asia  Offers exciting possibilities for short pulse X-rays (~2 ps) ∗ Hardware approach for 2 ps pulses requires vetting this spring The APS-U is “absolutely central” to US leadership in science APS-U is “ready to initiate construction” *

26 US Particle Accelerator School Linear Coherent Light Source - II  Maintains LCLS leadership in ultra-short pulse science  Broadens LCLS capabilities  Extends wavelength range  Substantial Increase in average brightness  Substantially increases LCLS capacity LCLS-II is “absolutely central” to US leadership in science LCLS-II is “ready to initiate construction”

27 US Particle Accelerator School Next Generation Light Source  High rep rate, soft X-ray source  Would be the world’s highest average power electron accelerator  Further discussion based on BESAC Light Source Charge ∗ Would in principle allow unique, multiple pulse experiments, including the possibility of "multi-dimensional" experiments ∗ Would in principle access science at the ~ 1fs time scale NGLS could be “absolutely central” * to US leadership in science NGLS has “significant scientific/engineering challenges to resolve before initiating construction”

28 US Particle Accelerator School SNS Second Target Station  Increases SNS power > 2 MW to improve neutron scattering performance  Will keep SNS competitive with ESS  Adds new instruments to US capabilities & capacity  Helps but does not close capacity gap with Western Europe  Which instruments to be decided with strong user input SNS-STS is “absolutely central” to US leadership in science SNS-STS has “scientific/engineering challenges to resolve before initiating construction”

29 US Particle Accelerator School Additional opportunities discussed by the sub-committee If you wish to add facilities or upgrades, please consider only those that require a minimum investment of $100 M

30 US Particle Accelerator School Future Light Sources  In addition to the completion of NSLS-II & upgrades of APS & LCLS A future light source is “absolutely central” to continued US leadership in science  All options (FEL, ERL, Ultimate Storage Ring) have “significant scientific/engineering challenges to resolve before initiating construction”  We look forward to the BESAC study this spring

31 US Particle Accelerator School Discussion


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