Cryogenic Permanent Magnet Undulators
Finn O’Shea March 27, 2013
HBEB 2013, Puerto Rico
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Outline
1) Motivation for shorter period technology As usual, it is money
2) Prototype undulator has been tested Results are ‘unsuprising’ and that is a good thing!
3) Improving performance of cryogenic undulators through the use of rare-earth element poles – the DPU project
Cryogenic compatible magnetic materials lead to improved performance
Can we do the same with the pole material?
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Motivationo Researchers from many branches of science are using modern light sources to do a lot of cutting edge research
o LCLS accepts ¼ of proposals for beam time
o These machines are big (km) and expensive ($1/2 billion)
o Linacs are the really expensive part
o NGLS is being built through a mountain – real estate is getting more expensive
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Where do short periods fit in?
“Moore’s Law” of radiation brightness is doubling every 10 months since the 1960s – this has come from bigger, more expensive facilities
Increased brightness does not lead to increased access unless the facilities become more common
The path to cheaper access is to increase the amount of radiation produced by each electron Lots of beam lines on synchrotrons Multiple beam lines at FELs: LCLS-II, NGLS, SwissFEL Reduce the energy of the electrons required to produce
the desired wavelengths
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To make shorter periods…
The magnetic material needs to be very radiation resistant In vacuum undulators have higher exposure because of the
smaller gap and no vacuum chamber wall for protection
Cryogenically cooled magnets show a modest increase in remanent field and a massive increase in coercivity They also show an increase in resistance to radiation induced
demagnetization Originally attributed to coercivity increase,
more likely due to increase in heat
capacity decreasing the effects of local heating
Rad damage is not well understood: Radiation damage is reversible with
remagnetization no structure change
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Strategy to increase survivability
1) Use material that has maximum remanent field at room temperature
Limitation is ability to assemble the undulator
2) Cool as much as possible to get the highest possible magnetic field and largest coercivity/heat capacity
The clear choice is PrFeB No SRT (NdFeB) High remanent field (SmCo)
Benabderrahmane, NIM A 669, 1 (2011).
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Example of performance change
LCLS Normal
Energy = 13.6 GeV
Charge = 250 pC
Norm Emittance = 0.4 μm
Saturation Length: 60 m
Pulse Energy = 1.5 mJ
Pulse Length = 100 fs
B = 2 x 1033 ph/(s mm2 mrad2 0.1%)
LCLS Low Charge/CPMU
Energy = 4.5 GeV
Charge = 250 fC
Norm Emittance = 33 nm
Saturation Length: 15 m
Pulse Energy = 2.8 μJ
Pulse Length = 0.5 fs
B = 1.3 x 1036 ph/(s mm2 mrad2 0.1%)
PRSTAB 070702 (2010)
CPMU9Testing of Cryogenic Permanent Magnet Undulator – 9 mm at the Next Linear Collider Test Accelerator
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Cryogenic Permanent Magnet Undulator – 9 mm period
• 9 mm period length
• 20 period prototype
• Compensated 1st integral
• Working temp down to 11K
• NLCTA experiment run at 43K
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CPMU - II
Design process was iterative: use FEM and BIM codes to determine magnetically safe assembly and operating conditions as material is characterized. Results in a 2D geometry with pieces that are
strategically chamfered to reduce reverse fields
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Measuring the field
Field is measured at cryogenic temps on a specially constructed measurement bench at HZ-Berlin Bpeak=1.15 T (K=0.97)
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Next Linear Collider Test AcceleratorFacilities at NLCTA made it an excellent place to test the undulator using a scaled experiment at optical frequencies.
• Radiation bandwidth measurement
•Energy modulation measurement
• Confirmation of microbunching
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Undulator Radiation Bandwidth
at NLCTA the bandwidth of the radiation should be dominated by the 5% bandwidth of the single electron radiation process
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Laser seeding
800 nm laser is used to seed the FEL mechanism
Laser is shorter than the electron beam, they are about the same transverse width
Leads to very 3D process
Energy modulation strength is function of distance along beam and radius
Genesis predicts:K = 0.97
K = 0.94
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Observation of microbunching
Microbunching of electron beam causes coherent emission of transition radiation
CTR signal shows up as near field structure when laser is turned on
Null tests showed that this is likely forward CTR from OTR3 rather than backward CTR from OTR4, which is the screen that is imaged
Laser off Laser on
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Summary of Results
Bandwidth of the undulator radiation is dominated by the 5% interference bandwidth – consistent with expectations
Energy modulation is consistent with expected value from iFEL interaction
CTR appears when modulation is turned on – microbunching is occuring although scattering in OTR3 is spoiling the measurement
Rare-earth polesDysprosium poles at RadiaBeam Technologies
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Why replace CoFe?
Vanadium Permendur (49% Fe, 49% Co, 2% V) is an excellent pole material Saturates at low applied field:
μi~104 and Hsat<<0.1 T
Bsat = 2.35 T
The reason for replacing CoFe as the pole material of choice is to get higher saturation induction Because we need to cool a CPMU anyway, what gains can be
realized?
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Rare-earth elements
Materials such as dysprosium, gadolinium and holmium show large sat. ind. at cryogenic temperatures Dy -> 3.8 T (single crystal)
Single crystals are hard to grow and polycrystals are not useful
Secondary re-crystallization can be used to develop “texture”
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Secondary Re-crystallization
Rolling then annealing exploits an energy advantage that results in the growth of the grains in-plane
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Performance of textured Dy
100 μm thick foils
• Competitive with CoFe if the applied field is greater than ~0.10 T• Thinner foils should work even better • Non-linear nature and mixing of 1120 and 1010 in different samples could be a problem
CoFe
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Short test undulator
Most poles are CoFe
One pole pair is replaced with Dy laminated poles
The field is measured while the undulator is cooled
BCoFe is compared to BDy
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Results
~3%
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Details
Effect is reproduced in Radia with the magnetization curves measured from one pole (destructive measurement via VSM)
Dy Pole position exposed it to larger applied fields than a typical pole
working point is above
the Dy > CoFe point
Shows promise
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Summary
Using shorter period undulators can: Decrease the electron beam energy required to reach a given
wavelength Extend the reach of existing facilities
This can lead to cost savings and a potential increase in accessibility
A prototype short period cryogenic undulator has been built and tested in a successful scaled experiment at optical wavelengths
Rare-earth poles have the potential to outperform CoFe poles in undulators that can be cooled to the temperatures where they are ferromagnetic
Thank you!