The present invention relates to energy recovery linacs (ERL) and more particularly to improving the energy recovery in a spent beam.
In a conventional Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) the spent electron beam energy is not completely recovered. As shown in
As shown in
Accordingly, there is a need to recover the energy in a spent beam with high efficiency and transfer the energy back to a consumer for reuse, such as to the ERL injector cryomodules. Such an energy recovery method would be advantageous to any accelerator facility with a dumped beam, such as a beam stop, with a beam power considerably high such that a recovery would yield a significant RF energy and cost saving.
A first object of the invention is to provide a method for recovering energy from a spent energy recovery linac (ERL) beam.
A second object of the invention is to provide a method for recovering the energy in a spent beam with high efficiency.
A further object is to provide a method for transferring the energy from a spent beam back to a consumer for reuse, such as to the ERL injector cryomodules.
Another object is to provide a recovery method for spent beams that would yield a significant RF energy and cost saving for operation of the ERL.
A further object is of the invention is to significantly reduce the power to be dumped thereby resulting in a simpler and much less hazardous beam dump.
These and other objects and advantages of the present invention will be better understood by reading the following description along with reference to the drawings.
The present invention is a method for recovering energy from spent energy recovered linac (ERL) beams. The method includes adding a plurality of passive decelerating cavities at the beam dump of the ERL, adding one or more coupling waveguides between the passive decelerating cavities, setting an adequate external Q (Qext) to adjust to the beam loading situation, and extracting the RF energy through the coupling waveguides.
The present invention is a method for solving the problem of wasted energy in spent beams, such as in the typically not fully energy recovered electrons in the recirculating path of an Energy Recovery Linac.
Since an ERL is destined to operate at high average beam currents (greater than 1 mA), the corresponding beam power can be significant. As an example, at 100 mA and 10 MeV an RF power repository as high as 1 MW would be available that could be reused, for instance transferred back to the electron injector.
With reference to
As shown in
Referring to
The invention solves the problem of wasted RF energy of spent beams, such as the typically not fully recovered energy electrons in the recirculating path of a conventional Energy Recovery Linac, in which the RF power repository can be in the hundred kW to MW range usually wasted in a beam dump. With the method of the present invention, the energy is not wasted but is recovered with high efficiency and transferred back to a consumer for reuse, such as in the ERL injector cryomodules.
A critical feature of the present invention is the recovery of the RF power repository of spent beams. According to the present invention, superconducting RF cavities are the preferred choice for efficient recovery of the energy of a spent beam. Limitations may depend on the start beam parameters. Other than individual on-site space constraints, there are no restrictions to the integration of focusing magnets between cavities to steer the beam through several cavity sections of different velocity profile.
The design of the passive decelerating cavity or cavities depends on the RF frequency and bunch pattern (i.e. bunch charge and bunch repetition rate determines beam current). The RF energy is out-coupled via a waveguide port (coaxial or rectangular waveguide) from each cavity. Rectangular waveguides are used to transmit high power levels. The value of the external Q (Qext) of the waveguide port together with the number of cavity cells determines the total voltage and thus energy excited in the cavity in the saturated state. This also determines the decelerating field (Edec) and RF energy extractable per cavity, respectively. The Qext-value of a cavity is adjusted by design. The Qext-value is chosen such that the stored energy is not decayed significantly from bunch to bunch. This favors SRF cavities since the Qext-value required can be high (Qext>105). SRF cavities further enable negligible losses in cavity walls compared to copper structure and enable operation of the cryogenic cooling system at a helium temperature of 4.5K instead of 2K.
Complex voltage (V) in saturated state for point-charge bunches is:
where Nb=number of bunches, q=bunch charge, κz=longitudinal loss factor of fundamental RF mode, ω=angular RF frequency, Q1=loaded Q of RF cavity (˜Qext for SRF structure), Tb=bunch-to-bunch spacing (assumed constant for CW beam), Δtn is possible jitter from bunch to bunch and may vary from bunch-to-bunch, and Δφ=corresponding phase change from bunch to bunch. (Note: The RF system does not allow for a phase slippage to occur, since ERL beam must be kept in synchronization with RF).
Average power per cavity is:
where R=shunt impedance of cavity, Iave=average beam current, Pgain is approximately twice the real voltage gain for a given Tb in steady state and for a single bunch passage, and Ql/Qext determines power/energy extracted.
Although the description above contains many specific descriptions, materials, and dimensions, these should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention but as merely providing illustrations of some of the presently preferred embodiments of this invention. Thus the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims and their legal equivalents, rather than by the examples given.
This application claims the benefit of Provisional U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 62/287,202 filed Jan. 26, 2016.
The United States Government may have certain rights to this invention under Management and Operating Contract No. DE-AC05-060R23177 from the Department of Energy.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62287202 | Jan 2016 | US |