Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Beam Halo Monitoring using Optical Diagnostics Hao Zhang University of Maryland/University of Liverpool/Cockcroft Institute.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Beam Halo Monitoring using Optical Diagnostics Hao Zhang University of Maryland/University of Liverpool/Cockcroft Institute."— Presentation transcript:

1 Beam Halo Monitoring using Optical Diagnostics Hao Zhang University of Maryland/University of Liverpool/Cockcroft Institute

2 Outline Introduction Motivation to Study Beam Halo Method Adaptive Method Using Digital Micro-mirror Device Experiment University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) JLAB FEL Injection of SPEAR3 storage ring 2

3 Beam Halo has many negative effects  Nuclear Activation of The Transport Channel  Emittance Growth  Emission of Secondary Electrons  Increasing Noise in The Detectors Halo Picture credit: Kishek, Stratakis Motivation for Beam Halo Studies 3 Halo can be regarded as small fraction of particles out a well defined beam core.

4 Solutions: 1) Passive spatial filtering, e.g. solar corography applied to beam imaging by T. Mitsuhashi of KEK DR = 10 6 -10 7 achieved 2) Spectra-Cam CID, DR ~ 10 6 measured with laser by J. Egberts, C. Welsch, T. Lefevre and E. Bravin 3) Adaptive Mask based on Digital Micromirror Array; DR ~ 10 5 measured with laser and 8 bit CCD camera by Egberts, Welsch Problems: 1) Need High Dynamic Range ( DR >10 5 - 10 6 ) 2) Core Saturation with conventional CCD’s: blooming, possible damage 3) Diffraction and scattering associated with high core intensity contaminate halo 4) Adaptability when the beam core shape change. Imaging Halos 4

5 Digital Micro-mirror arrayDevice * Micro-mirror architecture: 12 0 *DLP TM Texas Instruments Inc. 45 0 5 Mirror size: 13.68 um x 13.68 um Resolution: 1024 X 768 pixels

6 Computer Mirror Source Halo Light Core Light DMD Camera Sensor L3 L4 L1 L2 Computer Camera Sensor L3 Mirror Source L1 DMD L2 L4 Image 2 Image 1 Mask Adaptive Method for Halo Measurement 6 32mm

7 Quadrupole Screen Energy (keV)10 Pulse width (ns)100 Repetitive rate (Hz)20-60 Beam current (mA)0.6, 6, 21,80 UMER Experiment 7

8 Testing filtering ability of DMD 8 Beam on, DMD all onBeam on, DMD all off 32mm Average readout of the core region 4961621

9 202751000 20003000 Integration Frames: Dynamic Range Test of DMD with intense beam and circular mask* 9 Integration Frames: 32mm

10 Circular Mask Data line profile 10 0 1 32mm

11 70 280 x y (a) (b) IQIQ 640660250 45 60 82.9%I Q 66.3%I Q 49.7%I Q Quadrupole Current 32mm Demonstration of Adaptive Masking on UMER 11

12 Bending Magnet Energy135 MeV Macro pulse width:1 ms Repetitive rate:60 Hz Micro-pulse repetition rate :4.68 MHz Charge:60 pc/micro pulse Halo Experiment with OSR in JLab FEL 12 Beam pipe

13 1 1.2 s No mask X y 4 mm Integration Time 3 5 2 4 6 2.2 s 1.5 s 4 s 80 s 25000 5000 35000 15000 2000 Mask Level Masking OSR Image of JLAB FEL Beam 13 14 s

14 Measurement of Dynamic Range for OSR DMD System 14 10 0 10 -2 10 -4 10 -6 Normalized Counts pixel

15 DMA/DMD Configuration M=4 M=1 M=0.14

16 More Details… Mechanical Shutter (5ms) Diffraction pattern 1000x1000 DMD Filter wheel f=+125mm f=+100mm, 2” dia Scheinflug angle

17 9.6m M1=0.138 M2=3.55 DMD M3=1 M = M1*M2*M3 = 0.4 7.14m f=+2m f=+125mm f=+100mm Aperture & Cold finger 24° PiMax Filter wheel OSR Source Injector READOUT GateInjected beam Stored beam SPEAR3 Data acquisition BTS

18 PSF measurement of the stored beam  2 ms shutter mode  Increase the mask size by changing the intensity threshold level  ND filter from ND =5 to ND = 0 ND 5 ND 4 ND 3 ND 2 ND 1 ND 0 Mask 18 mm No Mask

19 Injected beam with presence of stored beam with different currents (a)(b) 6.11mA3.05mA1.52mA0.42mA Current /bunch Stored beam Injected beam 18 mm

20 Three matching condition by altering the quads in the BTS

21 Evolution of Beam centroid and beam size

22 Conclusion Applied a adaptive optics to detect small image signals from either beam halo or Injected beam compared with beam core or stored beam. Achieve a high dynamic range with this method.

23 Discussion How can we apply this method to other existing machines? What is the limitation of dynamic range? For Proton machine, since the beam is destructive, are there any usable screens?


Download ppt "Beam Halo Monitoring using Optical Diagnostics Hao Zhang University of Maryland/University of Liverpool/Cockcroft Institute."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google