Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Update on BGV impedance studies Alexej Grudiev, Berengere Luthi, Benoit Salvant for the impedance team Many thanks to Bernd Dehning, Massimiliano Ferro-Luzzi,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Update on BGV impedance studies Alexej Grudiev, Berengere Luthi, Benoit Salvant for the impedance team Many thanks to Bernd Dehning, Massimiliano Ferro-Luzzi,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Update on BGV impedance studies Alexej Grudiev, Berengere Luthi, Benoit Salvant for the impedance team Many thanks to Bernd Dehning, Massimiliano Ferro-Luzzi, Plamen Hopchev, Nicolas Mounet, Elena Shaposhnikova.

2 Agenda BGV design Impedance studies for the LHC First studies with 147 mm diameter Studies with smaller diameters and various geometries Conclusions and next steps

3 Design of new LHC BGV (Beam Gas Vertex detector) to be installed in LS1 request by Plamen, Bernd (BE-BI) and Massimiliano (LHCb)

4 Agenda BGV design Impedance studies for the LHC First studies with 147 mm diameter Studies with smaller diameters and various geometries Conclusions and next steps

5 Impedance studies in LHC We study the electromagnetic fields generated by the LHC beam when passing through the BGV. These fields perturb the guiding fields, and can lead to – Beam instabilities (longitudinal and transverse)  beam losses and/or emittance growth (many occurrence of transverse instabilities in 2012) – Beam induced heating of the surrounding  loss of performance, outgassing, deformation, or destruction of the equipment (many examples in 2012: TDI, BSRT, ALFA, MKI, TOTEM, vacuum bellows) In view of higher brightness after LS1, we need to carefully study all planned installation and modifications of LHC hardware.

6 Agenda BGV design Impedance studies for the LHC First studies with 147 mm diameter Studies with smaller diameters and various geometries Conclusions and next steps

7 First studies with CST (with initial radius of 147 mm)  Many longitudinal resonances whatever the angle from 800 MHz onwards. Angle 1=15 degrees Scan over Angle 2 Time domain wakefield simulations Frequency in GHz Longitudinal impedance in Ohm (underestimated)

8 Angle IN: 10 degrees Angle Out: 10 degrees Angle IN: 30 degrees Angle Out: 10 degrees With eigenmode solver: Largest longitudinal mode at ~1 GHz: R~1 MOhm, Q= 40,000 With eigenmode solver: Largest longitudinal mode at ~1 GHz: R~0.8 MOhm, Q= 65,000  Very large resonances, despite the longer taper Angle IN Angle OUT Angle IN Angle OUT

9 New geometry (smaller radius requested by Plamen : 130 mm) : taper IN : 6 degrees and taper OUT: 30 degrees With eigenmode solver: Many longitudinal modes after 900 MHz: R~0.07 MOhm, Q between 40,000 and 65,000 Still quite large, but factor 10 reduction.  What is the acceptable limit? Frequency (GHz) Re(Zlong) Shunt impedance Mode number

10 What is the acceptable limit (1/2) Limit for longitudinal instabilities – Limit from design report in 400 MHz RF system: 200 kOhm for ultimate intensity, 2.5 eVs longitudinal emittance at 7TeV (E. Shaposhnikova BE/RF-BR). – Hard limit below 500 MHz. In principle, less critical above 500 MHz. – However, much safer to stay below 200 kOhm for all frequency range

11 What is the acceptable limit (2/2) Limit for beam induced heating: – The cooling system should be dimensioned to cope with the power lost in the device – Ex: 70 kOhm at 900 MHz with 50 ns beam at 1.6e11 p/b  P loss ~ 700 W – Ex: 70 kOhm at 1100 MHz with 50 ns beam at 1.6e11 p/b  P loss ~ 100 W – Ex: 70 kOhm at 1200 MHz with 50 ns beam at 1.6e11 p/b  P loss ~ 5 W  It is critical for both limits to:  push the mode frequencies as high as possible  reduce the shunt impedance below 200 kOhm

12 Agenda BGV design Impedance studies for the LHC First studies with 147 mm diameter Studies with smaller diameters and various geometries – Impact of cavity length – Impact of taper length Conclusions and next steps

13 Impact of cavity length on shunt impedance of the highest mode  Not monotonic  The length of the cavity should not be too small  Frequency of the modes is not plotted, but is also important to assess their effects Cavity length

14 Agenda BGV design Impedance studies for the LHC First studies with 147 mm diameter Studies with smaller diameters and various geometries – Impact of cavity length – Impact of taper length Conclusions and next steps

15 Importance of taper (L=0.5m) L l l L = 0.5 m  The longer taper, the better

16 Importance of taper (L=1m) L l l L = 1 m  The longer taper, the better

17 Importance of taper (L=1.5m) L l l L = 1.5 m  The longer taper, the better!  The longer cavity length, the better (at least above, complete study ongoing)

18 Agenda BGV design Impedance studies for the LHC First studies with 147 mm diameter Studies with smaller diameters and various geometries – Impact of cavity length – Impact of taper length – What is the best if total length= 2m? Conclusions and next steps

19 A more realistic geometry Cavity length increases  Taper length decreases L l l L+2l = 2 m

20 Zoom below the limit  The longer the taper, the better (for the symmetric case)  Even with copper coating, well below the limit below 1.5 m of flat length (with Ploss of 40 W  is it acceptable from mechanical point of view?).

21 Conclusions and next steps There is hope with 106 mm radius! Can the system take ~ 50 W of power loss? Actual mechanical constraints to be added to the next round of simulations  What is feasible? Checks of the transverse impedance

22

23

24

25

26


Download ppt "Update on BGV impedance studies Alexej Grudiev, Berengere Luthi, Benoit Salvant for the impedance team Many thanks to Bernd Dehning, Massimiliano Ferro-Luzzi,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google