Permanent Magnet-Based Quadrupoles for Plasma Acceleration Sources
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Quadrupole Characteristics
2.1. Gradient
2.2. Multipoles
3. Fixed Gradient Permanent Magnet Quadrupoles
3.1. Halbach Structure
3.2. Hybrid Quadrupole
4. Variable Permanent Magnet Quadrupoles
5. Built Quadrupoles
5.1. Fixed Gradient
- A 12-modified PM Halbach ring system in which four of them are half permanent magnet and half iron poles (II) is proposed at Kyoto University in collaboration with SLAC as a final focus lens for a positron-electron linear collider accelerator [41]. The system has a bore radius of 7 mm with a magnetic length of 100 mm generating a maximum gradient of 289 T/m. At the department für Physik, in München for a Table-Top FEL application, two 12 PM sector Halbach ring system of 17 mm (15 mm) magnetic length and 3 mm bore radius achieve a gradient of 500 T/m a [42].
- A 16-sector PM Halbach structure with a 33.5 mm bore radius, 92 mm magnetic length, 27.1 T/m gradient and 2.5 T integrated gradient have been built at CESR [43]. Three PMQs of the same design, each made up of a Halbach ring of 16 segments, have been installed in the PLEIADES ICS experiment as a final focus system [4]. The bore radius is very small (2.5 mm) with a magnetic length of 10.4 mm providing the largest gradient recorded using PM technology that is around 560 T/m alongside a focusing tunability through longitudinal movement of the magnets.
- A compact PMQ with a hybrid type design of interest for ultimate storage rings has been designed at ESRF [44]. The magnetic structure includes rectangular PM blocks and soft iron poles. A prototype with a bore radius of 12 mm and a magnetic length of 226 mm has been built (see Figure 9) provides a gradient of 85 T/m.
5.2. Variable Gradient
- A double Halbach ring structure of type (IV) was fabricated at Kyoto U. / SLAC collaboration for a final focus in a linear collider. The system consists of an inner hybrid ring with 8 sectors Halbach system and the outer ring being a pure 12-magnet Halbach structure rotating around the first one resulting in gradient variation from 17 T/m up to 120 T/m for a 230 mm magnetic length and 10 mm bore radius [45].
- A super hybrid quadrupole combining permanent magnetic material, coils and soft magnetic material has been built (see Figure 10) and tested for the new Brazilian Synchrotron Light Source (Sirius) [46]. The system has a bore radius of 27.5 mm and a magnetic length of 288 mm providing a maximum gradient of 28 T/m with a 30% tunability.
- An adjustable strength PM system has been built and tested, in collaboration between SLAC and Fermilab, for the Next Linear Collider. The system is based on four PM blocks and four soft iron poles of type (VI), with the possibility to retract linearly the permanent magnet blocks enabling an integrated gradient variation between 7 T and 68.7 T (gradient between 13 T/m and 115 T/m) for a 6.5 mm bore radius [47].
- A modified the 12-sector Halbach design composed of eight magnets and four poles surrounded by air-cooled electromagnetic coils as presented in Figure 11 has been proposed in the framework of CLIC/CERN collaboration [48]. The bore radius is 4.125 mm with a magnetic length of 300 mm achieving a maximum gradient of 610 T/m with 20% tunability.
- Two variable systems have been built in a collaboration of STFC Daresbury Laboratory and CERN for the Compact LInear Collider (CLIC) project [49,50] with an objective to collide electron-positron at an energy of 3 TeV. The first design, shown in Figure 12-left, provides a gradient from 15 to 60.4 T/m with a magnetic length of 241 mm. The second design, shown in Figure 12-right, provides a gradient from 2.9 to 43.8 T/m with a magnetic length of 194 mm length. The strength is adjusted by moving the PMs vertically away from the center, and by creating an air gap the gradient is reduced.
- Two variable quadrupoles are proposed for an interdigital H-mode drift tube linear accelerator using KONUS beam dynamics [51]: The first using an external adjustable electromagnets as shown in Figure 13-(left), with a bore radius of 12.5 mm providing a gradient from 50 to 100 T/m. The second using internal adjustable permanent magnets as shown in Figure 13-(right) that is similar to type (IV) but with additional number of segmented magnets. For a bore radius of 12.5 mm, the achieved gradient can be varied from 50 to 102 T/m.
- Seven systems (QUAPEVA) of type (V) have been built in collaboration between SOLEIL and SigmaPhi [52,53] for the COXINEL project with an objective of FEL amplification using an LPA source. The QUAPEVA cosists of NdFeB magnets and permendur poles achieving a maximum gradient of 202 T/m and 45% tunability. The systems have a bore radius of 6 mm but with different magnetic lengths. Figure 14 presents the three particular configurations of the tuning magnets. The maximum and minimum gradient are obtained by orienting the tuning magnets easy axis towards the central magnetic poles. In these cases, the magnetic flux is either added (Figure 14a) or removed (Figure 14c) from the central poles. The average gradient is achieved when the tuning magnets are in the reference position, i.e. their easy axis is perpendicular to the central magnetic poles (Figure 14b). The QUAPEVAs are supported by translation tables (horizontal and vertical displacement) used to compensate any residual magnetic axis shift when varying the gradient, to perform electron beam based alignment [54,55]. The resulting mechanical design is shown in Figure 15 (left), also an assembled QUAPEVA on the translation table in Figure 15 (right).
5.3. Measurement
6. Summary
7. Conclusions
8. Patents
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Parameter | Value | Unit | |
---|---|---|---|
Magnet | NdFeB | ||
1.26 | T | ||
Materials | Coercivity | 1830 | kA/m |
Pole | Vanadium Permendur | ||
Saturation | 2.35 | T | |
6 | mm | ||
Geometry | 17 | mm | |
L | 100 | mm |
QUAPEVAs | Magnetic Length [mm] | Gradient [T/m] | [%] |
---|---|---|---|
Q1 | 26 | 196 | −5.1 |
Q2 | 40.7 | 202 | −4 |
Q3 | 44.7 | 203 | −3.5 |
Q4 | 47.1 | 204 | −3.3 |
Q5 | 66 | 208 | −1.8 |
Q6 | 81 | 209 | −1.3 |
Q7 | 100 | 211 | −0.28 |
Multipole | Radia [T·mm] | Measurement [T·mm] | [%] |
---|---|---|---|
b | 0.021 | 0.039 | 48 |
b | 84.68 | 84.45 | −0.28 |
b | 1.93 | 1.86 | −3.6 |
b | −1.46 | −1.02 | 30 |
Type | n° Magnets | n° Poles | Max G | Integ G | G/G |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Halbach | 4 | - | 78 T/m | 7.8 T | - |
Halbach | 8 | - | 207 T/m | 20.7 T | - |
Halbach | 12 | - | 237 T/m | 23.7 T | - |
Hybrid-I | 4 | 4 | 166 T/m | 16.6 T | - |
Hybrid-II | 4 + 4 halves | 4 halves | 211 T/m | 21.1 T | - |
Hybrid-III | 12 | 4 halves + ring | 227 T/m | 22.7 T | - |
Hybrid-IV | 4 + ring | 4 | 201 T/m | 20.1 T | 34% |
Hybrid-V | 4 + 4 cylinders | 4 | 185 T/m | 18.5 T | 20% |
Hybrid-VI | 4 | Bulk | 100 T/m | 10 T | 90% |
Project | Lab | Radius | L | Max G | integ G | G/G | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Storage ring | CESR | 33.5 mm | 92 mm | 27 T/m | 2.5 T | - | [43] |
PLEIADES ICS | Lawrence Livermore | 2.5 mm | 10.4 mm | 560 T/m | 5.8 T | - | [4] |
LINEAR COLLIDER | Kyoto University | 7 mm | 100 mm | 300 T/m | 28.5 T | - | [41,57,58] |
SPTEM | UCLA | 3.5 mm | 6.16 mm | 600 T/m | 3.3 T | - | [59] |
Radiography | Tsinghua University | 5 mm | 20 mm | 287 T/m | 5.74 T | - | [60] |
Storage Ring | ESRF | 12 mm | 226 mm | 82 T/m | 18.6 T | - | [44] |
Table-Top FEL | LMU Munich | 3 mm | 17 mm | 500 T/m | 8.5 T | - | [42] |
LPA | SPARC LAB | 3 mm | 20.2 | 519 | 10.5 T | - | [61] |
LINEAR COLLIDER | Kyoto/NIRS | 10 mm | 200 mm | 120 T/m | 24.2 T | 85% | [45,62] |
CLIC | CERN | 4.125 mm | 273 mm | 610 T/m | 172.5 | 20% | [48] |
CLIC | CERN/STFC | 13.6 mm | 214 mm | 60.4 T/m | 14.6 T | 75% | [49] |
CLIC | CERN/STFC | 13.6 mm | 194 mm | 43.8 T/m | 8.5 T | 93% | [49] |
Next Linear Collider | STI/SLAC | 6.5 mm | 420 mm | 163 T/m | 68.7 T | 90% | [47] |
COXINEL | SOLEIL | 6 mm | 100 mm | 210 T/m | 21 T | 44% | [52,53] |
linear accelerator | Peking University | 12.5 mm | - | 100 T/m | - | 50% | [51] |
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Ghaith, A.; Oumbarek, D.; Kitégi, C.; Valléau, M.; Marteau, F.; Couprie, M.-E. Permanent Magnet-Based Quadrupoles for Plasma Acceleration Sources. Instruments 2019, 3, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020027
Ghaith A, Oumbarek D, Kitégi C, Valléau M, Marteau F, Couprie M-E. Permanent Magnet-Based Quadrupoles for Plasma Acceleration Sources. Instruments. 2019; 3(2):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020027
Chicago/Turabian StyleGhaith, Amin, Driss Oumbarek, Charles Kitégi, Mathieu Valléau, Fabrice Marteau, and Marie-Emmanuelle Couprie. 2019. "Permanent Magnet-Based Quadrupoles for Plasma Acceleration Sources" Instruments 3, no. 2: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020027
APA StyleGhaith, A., Oumbarek, D., Kitégi, C., Valléau, M., Marteau, F., & Couprie, M. -E. (2019). Permanent Magnet-Based Quadrupoles for Plasma Acceleration Sources. Instruments, 3(2), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3020027