MC3: Beam Position Monitors
TUCI1
Bunch-resolved 3D beam position measurement system and its application in FELiChEM
23
A new infrared free-electron laser FEL facility named FELiChEM has been built at University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei. It is a user facility dedicated for energy chemistry research and can deliver the infrared laser in the spectral range of 2.5-200 μm to five research stations. FELiChEM consists of mid-infrared MIR and far-infrared FIR free-electron laser oscillators driven by a 60 MeV linac. The time structure of the electron beam can be easily tuned with the macrobunch width of less than 10 μs macrobunch repetition rate of 1--10 Hz and optional microbunch repetition rate within 238, 119, 59.5 and 29.75 MHz. A 3D bunch-by-bunch position measurement system was developed to monitor not just the average position of the macrobunch but also every individual bunch position in the train. With this toolkits, a significant beam loading effect can be easily observed downstream of the linear accelerator structure, and a strong dispersion effect is observable downstream of the optical oscillator. This diagnostic tool proves to be very useful for analyzing the status of the machine and implementing corresponding optimization measures. This paper will give a brief introduce of the machine, the hardware and software structure of the 3D position measurement system, and its application in machine commissioning and operation.
Paper: TUCI1
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUCI1
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 08 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 08 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUCC2
Low frequency position monitoring at the TRIUMF cyclotron injection line
27
A new 1mA ion source and a new injection line are presently under construction at TRIUMF for the 500 MeV H- cyclotron. A 300keV ion beam is pulse modulated at the exit of the ion source with a duty cycle varying in the range 1% - 99%. The pulse repetition frequency is around 1kHz and this is the only time varying beam structure available for a substantial fraction of the injection line, till the beam is bunched with an RF-frequency of 23MHz, before being injected to the cyclotron. A set of new diagnostics was developed to support operation of the injection line including the beam position monitoring system operating in the kHz regime. The beam position measurements are based on capacitive pickups and high-impedance electronics to extend the sensitivity towards low frequencies. Details of the system and test measurements will be presented.
Paper: TUCC2
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUCC2
About: Received: 22 Aug 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
Photon Beam Position Monitor for PLS-II Beamline
Photon Beam Position Monitor (PBPM) is an effective monitor for the synchrotron radiation position in a beamline of PLS-II and has been used for the insertion device beamline as well as the bending beamline. In this study, we report the operational status of PBPMs for PLS-II. The PBPM feedback system combined with the orbital feedback system maintains the same position of synchrotron radiation in the beamline. In addition, the scanning results of the blade current show that the orbital distortion can be monitored inside the insertion device. This means that the fine alignment of the electron orbit is possible with this result.
Overview of the BPM system for HIAF & CiADS projects
Both large-scale facilities, CiADS and HIAF, have a SC linac with current range from tens µA to 20 mA demanding a big dynamic for BPM. The HIAF booster ring accelerates all ion beams from MeV/u to GeV/u, resulted an unprecedented challenge to BPM with induced voltage in range of 40 uV – 40 V. Four types of pickups are designed, with the capacitive pickups inside the quadrupoles, the titanium button BPMs inside the CMs with a compact geometry, a complex structure integrated with BPM, a water-cooled niobium ring and vacuum pumps within 300 mm between the CMs. The SiO2 cables under 2 K are developed by the joint R&D with a domestic company. For the synchrotron, a diagonal-cut BPM is designed with a good position linearity, low beam impedance, good vacuum performance up to 5.0E-12 mbar, as well as good mechanical properties with the electrode coaxiality less than 0.2 mm. To obtain precise and reliable position measurement, the dedicated electronics are developed for the position and phase measurement in linac, and the turn-by-turn trajectory and orbit measurement for synchrotrons. Moreover, the non-linearity calibration due to the approaching effect and fringe field is carried out and a high-order polynomial correction algorithm is implemented on FPGA to get the real-time accurate position for beam offsets. Furthermore, both newly developed BPM electronics have self-testing and self-calibration functions. Presently the BPM system is preparing for the installation.
TUDC2
The study of high-frequency pick-ups for electron beam position measurements in the AWAKE common beamline
31
The common beamline of the AWAKE experiment at CERN involves the co-propagation of two particle beams: protons with 48 nC bunch charge and 250 ps bunch length, and electrons with up to 600 pC bunch charge and approximately 4 ps bunch length. The existing operational beam position monitors at AWAKE cannot measure the electron bunches whilst the more-intense proton bunches are present, due to their low operating frequency. In order to try to address this challenge, two different types of high-frequency pick-ups were studied, a conical-shaped button pick-up and a Cherenkov diffraction radiation-based pick-up designed to operate at around 30 GHz. Both devices were installed at AWAKE and were connected to two identical read-out systems designed by TRIUMF. This contribution presents and discusses the results obtained from beam-based measurements during the current experimental year.
Paper: TUDC2
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUDC2
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 12 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
Innovative transverse position measurement method based on precise signal phase detection and its experimental validation
The accurate measurement of the transverse position of a beam is crucial in particle accelerators, as it plays a key role in determining the beam parameters. Existing methods for beam position measurement rely on the detection of image currents induced on electrodes or the narrow-band wake field excited by the beam passing through a cavity-type structure. These methods have some limitations. Indirectly measuring the multiple pa rameters is computationally complex and requires external calibration to determine the system parameters in advance, and the utilization of the beam signal information is incomplete. In this work, a novel method that measures the absolute electron beam transverse positionis proposed. By utilizing the geometric relationship between the center position of the measured electron beam and multiple detection electrodes, as well as analyzing the differences in the arrival times of the beam signals detected by these electrodes, the absolute transverse position of the electron beam crossing the electrode plane can be calculated. This method has features such as absolute position measurement, position sensitivity coefficient independent of the vacuum chamber aperture, and no requirement for symmetrical detector electrode layout. The feasibility of this method is validated through numerical simulation and beam experiments.
Development and performance evaluation of the cavity BPM system for SHINE
The Shanghai high repetition rate XFEL and extreme light facility (SHINE) under construction is designed as one of the most advanced FEL facilities in the world, which will produce coherent x-rays with wavelengths from 0.05 to 3 nm and maximum repetition rate of 1MHz. To achieve precise beam trajectory measurement and stable alignment of the electron and photo beams in the undulator, the cavity beam position monitors (CBPM) including beam diameters of 35mm in LINAC and Bunch distribution section and 8mm in undulator have been designed and developed for the SHINE. The requirement of the transverse position resolution is better than 1μm and 200 nm for a single bunch of 100 pC, respectively. In this paper, we present the design of the cavity BPM system and the processing of the key equipment. The beam test bench has been established at the Shanghai Soft X-ray FEL facility (SXFEL), and preliminary beam experiments indicate that, with the bunch charge about 100pC, the position resolution of CBPM-35mm and CBPM-8mm is better than 330 nm and 70 nm, respectively.
TUP05
Development of multi-channel time-division multiplexing RF signal conditioning front-end for CAFe2 BPM system
35
The construction of China Accelerator Facility for Superheavy Elements(CAFe2) is advancing based on Chinese ADS Front-end Demo Linac(CAFe). However, the original Beam Position Monitor(BPM) read-out electronics of CAFe could not meet the requirements of the CAFe2 BPM probes in terms of quantity and the measurement demands of low-intensity heavy ion beams. In response to this challenge, a high-speed RF switch array supporting multi-channel multiplexing, adjustable gain and filtering was developed. This array served as the RF signal conditioning front-end, together with the RF front-end and digital signal processing platform, to constitute a complete BPM read-out electronics. Laboratory testing validated the feasibility of the high-speed RF switch array and the entire read-out electronics. Compared with traditional read-out electronics, the read-out electronics equipped with the high-speed RF switch array enables the measurement of 32 signals from 8 BPM probes. This approach significantly improves the system's integration and reusability, while offers an efficient solution for implementing multi-channel time-division multiplexing measurement under different beam intensities and operating frequencies. Additionally, by simultaneously accessing signals from multiple BPM probes, this system better supports differential measurement. Overall, the high-speed RF switch array not only meets the requirements of CAFe2 but is also applicable for other accelerators with multiple BPM probes.
Paper: TUP05
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP05
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 06 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 07 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP07
Stripline design for tune measurement in the ILSF Storage Ring
39
The Iranian Light Source Facility Storage Ring is under design with a 528 m circumference and will store the electron bunches with 3 GeV energy to produce high-flux radiation that ranges from infrared to hard X-rays. Two Striplines are planned to be installed in the ILSF storage ring for beam tune measurement. The first one will be used for exciting the beam and the other for horizontal and vertical beam position measurements. In this paper, the design of the striplines for the ILSF storage ring is investigated. Each stripline is matched with 50Ω and has 4 strips (electrodes) that are placed at 45 degrees to the beam axis, the best geometry is achieved and optimized by CST Microwave Studio simulation.
Paper: TUP07
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP07
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 11 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP08
Design of button beam position monitor for the ILSF booster
43
The Iranian Light Source Facility Booster is under design with a 504 m circumference and will accelerate the electron bunches from 150 MeV to 3 GeV. the 50 button-type beam position monitors (BPMs) are considered the non-destructive tools to measure the beam position in the ILSF booster. In this paper, the design of the BPM for the ILSF booster is studied. The BPM blocks have 4 buttons (electrodes) that are placed at 45 degrees to the beam axis. to choose the best geometry, The BPMs with different button diameters and gaps are simulated by the CST Microwave Studio and BpmLab.
Paper: TUP08
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP08
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 11 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 11 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP09
Prototype of BPM electronics for FEL-HMF
46
This paper presents a prototype of BPM electronics for experimental installation of free electron laser and high magnetic field (FEL-HMF). FEL-HMF integrates mid-long Infrared free electron laser, high magnetic field and cryogenic, which is a critical apparatus for new advanced materials especially for low-power electronic materials. The BPM electronics consists of two ADC chips and one FPGA SoC. The ADC has two channels, and sampling rate is 240Msps. The FPGA SoC implements high speed digital signal and data process. The logic part of FPGA SoC is running signal process. The processor part of FPGA SoC runs Linux operating system and EPICS-based user application program. This BPM electrons has been tested and analyzed in lab. Its X and Y position is ~1.4um (RMS).
Paper: TUP09
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP09
About: Received: 02 Sep 2024 — Revised: 10 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 10 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP10
A high-precision low-latency DBPM processor for HALF
50
Hefei Advanced Light Facility (HALF) is a fourth-generation vacuum ultraviolet and X-ray diffraction limit synchrotron radiation (DLSR) light source under construction. It is expected to have an ultra-low emittance and an extremely small beam size, which requires high-precision orbit detection and fast feedback control. The processor is the key component of the digital beam position monitor (DBPM) and control system, which is required to provide a submicrometer resolution in beam position measurement with a processing latency of lower than 90 μs. This paper presents the design and testing of a high-precision low-latency DBPM processor. In order to reduce the latency and ensure the high position resolution, a specific higher sampling frequency is chosen to reduce the quantization noise platform of the analog to digital convertor and an optimized low-order filter is adopted. Specialized efforts are devoted to the low jitter sampling clock generation and low noise analog circuit design. Furthermore, a dual-pilot tone structure was employed to compensate the gain variations across the four channels of the beam monitor sensor. The laboratory test results show that the DBPM has a position resolution of better than 400 nm for turn-by-turn acquisition, better than 90 nm for fast acquisition at 20 kHz rate, and better than 20 nm for slow acquisition at 10 Hz rate, with a total latency of less than 80 μs.
Paper: TUP10
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP10
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 10 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP11
Beam position monitors for the HEPS
54
At the High Energy Photon Source (HEPS), a high orbital stability of typically 10 % of the beam size and angular divergence must be achieved, which implies that the beam orbit must be stabilized to the sub-micrometer level. A button and stripline beam position monitor (BPM) were designed based on the analytical formulas and CST simulations results. The results of electromagnetic field simulations revealed how various mechanical errors, such as button size and location accuracy, as well as the related button capacitance, exert different influences on the beam position measurement. The performance of an actual BPM pickup was measured, along with an assessment of the error on the beam position measurement. Additionally, a wakefield analysis, including an investigation of trapped resonant modes and related thermal deformation, was conducted. The characteristic impedances of the stripline were designed to be 50 Ω and confirmed by measurements. The position sensitivity, position resolution, capacitance and the electro-mechanical offsets were measured using the Lambertson method, and the calibration coefficients were measured using a stretched wire.Various problems that arise during the processing and installation process will also be introduced.
Paper: TUP11
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP11
About: Received: 30 Aug 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 10 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP12
Optimization of the kicker/BPM design with tapered striplines
58
The injection kicker design exploiting strip-lines and linear taper connections of the strip-lines to the feedthroughs was proposed and has been successfully used in the DAFNE electron-positron collider [1]. Such a design has helped to reduce the device beam coupling impedance, to improve the uniformity of the deflecting electromagnetic fields and to provide better matching with the feedthroughs. In this paper we propose using nonlinear taper connections in order to decrease further the beam coupling impedance. We have performed numerical simulations and analytical studies of several nonlinear tapers demonstrating that the coupling impedance can be substantially reduced while keeping or even improving the transfer (signal) impedance of the strip-line kickers (or BPM). The effect of the nonlinear tapering is particularly important for short strip-line devices when the taper length is limited due to lack of available space and/or when the strip-lines are moved closer to the beam in order to increase the device shunt (signal) impedance.
Paper: TUP12
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP12
About: Received: 01 Aug 2024 — Revised: 11 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP13
Design of Beam Position Monitor of Wuhan Photon Source
62
Wuhan Photon Source (WHPS), as a fourth-generation synchronous light source, imposes stringent requirements on the resolution and longitudinal coupling impedance of the Beam Position Monitor (BPM). To address the need for beam current monitoring in its 1.5 GeV diffraction-limited storage ring, an optimized design scheme for button BPM is proposed. Additionally, the structure of the BPM feedthrough is enhanced, and a detailed investiga-tion into the impact of various materials on the longitudi-nal coupling impedance of the BPM is conducted. These findings serve as a valuable reference for the future de-sign of similar BPM systems.
Paper: TUP13
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP13
About: Received: 01 Sep 2024 — Revised: 10 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
High-sensitivity RF direct sampling processor redefines the beam diagnostic system
RF direct sampling and processing of beam signals has always been the goal pursued in beam diagnostic systems. Now it’s time to make it happen. For the first time, a high-sensitivity RF direct sampling processor has been developed for C-band cavity pickups in SHINE/SXFEL. It redefines the beam diagnostic system. There is no longer a need for complex analog down-conversion modules in traditional cavity BPM/BAM systems. In addition, the processor can simultaneously meet the signal processing needs of different cavities with a center frequency below 6 GHz. Obviously, the RF direct sampling processor greatly reduces the complexity and costs of the system, shows great versatility. Meanwhile, compared to the down-conversion electronics, this processor demonstrates much higher sensitivity (twice) due to a significant reduction in analog components. The processor also has a huge advantage in other beam diagnostics because of its wide bandwidth and high sampling rate, such as bunch-by-bunch measurement and feedback system on synchrotron radiation facility. Now it's time to massively apply the RF direct sampling processor to promote the development of beam diagnostic technology.
TUP15
Neural network technique for improving accuracy, reliability and robustness of beam position monitor system
67
The beam position monitor (BPM) is a crucial instrumentation system for the commissioning and operation of the accelerator. Its accuracy and robustness are essential for ensuring the stability of the accelerator. Currently, the beam position is calculated by fitting a polynomial to the four voltage signals obtained from the BPM electrodes in BEPCII and HEPS. To improve the system’s robustness, a formula is provided that expresses the relationship between the three voltage signals and the position. The average fitting error is 40 𝜇m, but the error of the three-electrode calculation is not high. Therefore, we propose using neural networks for beam position calculation to improve the system’s robustness while guaranteeing its accuracy. This will ensure that the beam position can be provided stably, even in the case of one single electrode error. In our experiments, we use BPM calibration data from HEPS. The trained neural network’s performance on the test set meets the accuracy requirements, with an error of less than 15 𝜇m in both four-electrode and three-electrode predictions, and an average value of fitting error is 1 𝜇m. Furthermore, we validate the neural network’s generalization ability by using data measured by BPM on HEPS.
Paper: TUP15
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP15
About: Received: 02 Sep 2024 — Revised: 07 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 08 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP16
Development status of the BPM system for the SPring-8-II storage ring
71
We are developing a BPM system for the 6 GeV fourth-generation light source, SPring-8-II, which is a renewal of the third-generation light source, SPring-8. The new storage ring will be equipped with 340 button-type BPMs. BPM heads with molybdenum button electrodes have been designed to achieve the position sensitivity coefficients required for SPring-8-II as well as minimal beam impedance and heat dissipation. The BPM heads for the vacuum chambers of the prototype cell are currently being fabricated to validate the mechanical design. As for radiation-resistant signal cables, PEEK-insulated semi-rigid cables will be used for connection to the BPM head, and polyethylene-insulated corrugated cables relay from the girder side to the readout electronics. High-precision and stable readout electronics consist of RF front-end boards and high-speed digitizer boards based on the MTCA.4 standard. The initial batch of electronics has already been installed to replace the obsolete single-pass BPM system of the current SPring-8, and the performance evaluation is in progress. In this presentation, we will report the overview and the development status of the SPring-8-II BPM system.
Paper: TUP16
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP16
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 09 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP17
Cavity Beam Position Monitors pulse Injection source
76
The Cavity Beam Position Monitor (CBPM) system at Accelerator Test Facil- ity 2 (ATF2, KEK, Japan) operates with attenuation at a reduced 200 nm (vs measured 20-30 nm) resolution to cope with CBPM to magnet misalignment. In addition, CBPMs need regular calibrations to maintain their performance. To address these limitations, a pulse injection system is under development. This system aims to compensate for static offsets by injecting an anti-phase replica of the average beam signal directly into the sensor cavities. The same signal can provide a calibration tone for the whole processing chain and eliminate lengthy beam-based calibrations. Proof of principle tests for such a system have been conducted in December 2023. In this paper, we report on the results of the first beam test, discuss the technical challenges and provide a preliminary hardware specification for future experiments.
Paper: TUP17
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP17
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 11 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP18
Design of a stripline BPM for CSNS-II injection upgrade
80
The CSNS accelerator complex is upgrading the injection area to improve the beam-loss control during beam injection and acceleration in the Rapid Cycling Synchrotron. At CSNS, the linac beam energy will be increased from 80MeV to 300MeV employing a new superconducting accelerating section, and the beam power at the spallation target will be 500kW. To accomplish these requirements, a stripline-type BPM has been designed with a large aperture and 50 Ω stripline electrodes. This BPM has an inner diameter of 52 mm and is used to detect the beam with a current of 10-30 mA and a pulse width of 100-500us. Several geometrical and electrical parameters have been optimized with numerical simulation. This paper will describe the design and optimization of the stripline-type BPM in detail, and simulation results are discussed.
Paper: TUP18
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP18
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 10 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 10 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
High-quality feedthrough developments for beam detectors
Feedthroughs have been used for different accelerator detectors, such as BPM, BAM, CBPM, ACCT, and the RF cavities etc. that are used to test the beam properties and RF cavity signals. For this purpose, large bandwidth with low transfer loss is required. The long-life and high-stability are also needed. The SMA-type and N-type feedthroughs are developed. The bandwidth of the SMA-type is up to 20 GHz, and that of the N-type up to 13 GHz with low transfer loss. Those feedthroughs have used in the strip-BPM, button-BPM, and CBPM etc..
TUP20
Developing a new beam position monitor electronics for HIPA, The PSI High Intensity Proton Accelerator
83
The High Intensity Proton Accelerator (HIPA) at PSI presently has an RF beam position monitor (BPM) system based on 20 year old Xilinx Virtex-2 Pro Systems-on-Chip (SoC), using application-specific integrated circuits (ASICS) for direct digital downconverters. For the planned upgrade of the electronics as well as for new HIPA projects, we started the development of a new HIPA BPM electronics, using a generic electronics platform called "DBPM3" that is already being used for SwissFEL and SLS 2.0 electron BPM systems. In this contribution, first test results of a DBPM3-based HIPA BPM electronics prototype are presented, including a comparison with the present electronics.
Paper: TUP20
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP20
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 08 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 09 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP21
Electron bunch position determination using a high frequency button beam position monitor in the AWAKE facility
87
The AWAKE facility uses novel proton beam-driven plasma wakefields to accelerate electron bunches over 10m of Rubidium plasma. Precise monitoring of 2 diverse beam types necessitates an electron beam position monitor (BPM) working in a frequency regime of tens of GHz. A high frequency conical button-style BPM with a working regime of up to 40 GHz has been investigated as a way to discriminate the electromagnetic fields of 19 MeV, 4 ps electron bunches propagating spatially and temporally together with a 400 GeV, 170 ps proton bunch in the AWAKE common beamline. The sensitivity of the HF BPM to the electron beam position is determined under various beam conditions, with both electrons and protons, and integration with a TRIUMF front-end is discussed.
Paper: TUP21
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP21
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 07 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 07 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
On-line beam synchronous phase measurement using deep learning models
The on-line calibration of beam synchronous phase (SP) is crucial for enhancing the operational efficiency of accelerators. Recently, we developed an artificial intelligence (AI)-based beam information measure model that uses transient beam loading information as input while simultaneously predicting beam current and SP. This method employs Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) to extract multi-dimensional radio frequency (RF) time-series features and incorporates an attention mechanism to evaluate the weights of RF waveforms at different times. The method can work in complex operating conditions such as open-loop, closed-loop, and with or without cavity detuning, and has higher precision and stronger generalization capabilities compared to other online calibration method of SP (such as those based on cavity differential equations or RF beam vector). We validated the consistency of the algorithm results with BPM and BCM measurements on the Buncher of European Spallation Source. Our method achieves an mean absolute error of 0.28° for predicting SP and 0.47 mA for predicting beam current, showing very promising results.
TUP23
Development of an automatic calibration system for BPM
91
Beam position monitor(BPM) is used to measure the horizontal and vertical positions of the beam in the vacuum pip. Before online installation, it usually needs to be calibration. High Intensity Heavy-ion Accelerator Facility(HIAF) and China initiative Accelerator Driven System(CiADS) will need a large number of BPM, so it is a great challenge for BPM calibration work. In order to complete this work efficiently and accurately, this research designs and develops an automatic BPM calibration system. The hardware of this BPM calibration system consists of 4 major sections, they are calibration platform equipment, precise motion control device, signal processing electronics and industrial computer. The control software was programmed by C to realize automatic calibration functions based on EPICS. A high-order fitting algorithm programmed by python used to solve the problem of smaller linear range of the capacitive BPM. It significantly improves the accuracy of position measurement after calibration.
Paper: TUP23
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP23
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 08 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 08 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP24
Development of digital beam position monitor for HEPS
94
High Energy Photon Source (HEPS) is a proposed new generation light source with a beam energy of 6 GeV, high brightness, and ultra-low beam emittance. An RF BPM has been designed at IHEP as part of an R&D program to meet the requirements of both the injection system and storage ring. The RF BPM architecture consists of an Analog Front-End (AFE) board and a Digital Front-End board (DFE) based on a custom platform. In this paper, we present the overall architecture of the RF BPM electronics system and the performance evaluation of the BPM processor, including beam current, filling pattern, and position measurement resolution as a function of the beam current.
Paper: TUP24
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP24
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 11 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP25
Development of stripline-type beam position monitor system for CSNS-II
98
As part of the CSNS-II upgrade, the H- LINAC beam energy will be increased from 80 MeV to 300 MeV using superconducting cavities. To accurately measure beam position, phase, and energy, stripline-type Beam Position Monitors (BPM) are essential. The shorted-type stripline BPM was chosen for this upgrade due to its excellent S/N ratio and rigid structure. As space is limited in the LINAC's SC section, the BPMs must be embedded in the quadrupole magnet. Two prototypes, with inner diameters of 50 mm and 96 mm, were designed using numerical simulation codes and manufactured for beam testing. This paper will detail the simulation, design, and beam test results of the prototype BPMs for CSNS-II.
Paper: TUP25
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP25
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP26
Preliminary Research and Development of BPM Electronics Upgrade for the RCS Ring in CSNS II
102
The first phase of the China Spallation Neutron Source (CSNS) project aims to accelerate negative hydrogen ions to 80 MeV using a linear accelerator. Subsequently, these negative hydrogen ions are converted into protons after stripping, and then injected into a rapid cycling proton synchrotron. The proton beam is further accelerated to an energy of 1.6 GeV and guided through a beam transport line to a tungsten target, where spallation reactions gen-erate neutrons. With the initiation of the Phase II project of the China Spallation Neutron Source (CSNS II), the target power is anticipated to increase significantly to 500 kW in the future. Upgrading the existing 32 sets of BPM electronics on the Rapid Cycling Synchrotron (RCS) ring is essential to accommodate the enhanced beam power and fulfill the new requirements of the beam measurement. This paper focuses on the novel design and validation of the BPM electronics, as well as the execu-tion of tests during beam operation.
Paper: TUP26
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP26
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 08 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 13 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP27
The development of new BPM signal processor at SSRF
106
A BPM signal processor has been developed for SSRF since 2009. It composed of Virtex5 FPGA, ARM board, and 4 125MSPS sampling rate ADCs. Since then, electronic technology has made significant progress. Such as Zynq UltraScale+ MPSoC FPGA contains both hard-core ARM and high-performance FPGA, and ADCs with a sampling rate of 1GSPS have been applied in mass production. A new BPM processor with Zynq UltraScale+ MPSoC FPGA and 1GSPS ADCs is under development at SSRF. Due to the application of new technologies, the processor performance will be significantly improved. The new processor can also meet the needs of ultra-low emittance measurement for the new generation of light sources. This paper will introduce the design of the processor and the relative tests.
Paper: TUP27
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP27
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 12 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 13 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP28
Design of beam position monitoring interlocking protection system
110
The machine protection system guarantees the safe operation of the HIAF (High Intensity heavy-ion Accelerator Facility) in different operating modes and also prevents damage to the online equipment in the event of a failure. Beam current data such as beam current position and phase is an important basis for analysing and diagnosing accelerator faults. In this paper, the authors designed the beam position and phase interlock monitoring system. The system is based on circular buffer and AXI4 protocol to realize the interaction of interlock data and locking of interlock status. At the same time, the system uses memory mapping to save the interlock beam data. Laboratory tests show that the system could save the beam position, beam phase, SUM signals and amplitude of sensed signal per probe path during interlocking before and after 8ms and latch the interlock status of 25 channels. The system was deployed at the CAFe-LINAC gas pedal in March 2024 to complete online measurements.
Paper: TUP28
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP28
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 10 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 11 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP29
Offline Calibration and Error Correction of the Stripline BPM for the HALF Injector
114
This study conducted offline calibration tests on the stripline Beam Position Monitor (BPM) designed for the Hefei Advanced Light Facility (HALF) injector. The Lambertson method was used to measure the off-set between the electrical center and the mechanical center of the BPM, with results showing horizontal and vertical offsets of 0.1154 mm and 0.1661 mm, respec-tively. Additionally, the wire-scan method was em-ployed to construct the BPM mapping, and polynomial fitting was applied to effectively reduce the BPM’s nonlinearity and system errors. The experimental re-sults provide essential data support for the optimiza-tion and practical application of the BPM in the HALF injector.
Paper: TUP29
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP29
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 09 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP30
Development of high-precision beam position monitor for the Korean 4GSR project
118
The Korean 4GSR project is currently under construction in Ochang, South Korea, with the aim of achieving first beam commissioning in 2027. Designed to achieve an emittance approximately 100 times smaller than that of third-generation synchrotron radiation storage rings, the project requires the development of several high-precision beam diagnostic devices. In particular, the beam position monitor (BPM) is aimed at reducing longitudinal wake impedance to suppress heating and beam instability. For this purpose, two types of 4GSR BPM pick-up antennas have been developed. The first utilizes a SiO2 glass insulator, while the second is designed in a cone shape using Al2O3. The differences and advantages of the two designs are explained, and the performance obtained through actual beam tests will be described. This presentation will provide an overview of the current development status of the beam position monitor developed for the 4GSR project, including details on the approximate configuration of the 4GSR BPM system.
Paper: TUP30
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP30
About: Received: 11 Sep 2024 — Revised: 12 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP31
First experiences with the new Pilot-Tone-based eBPM system in Elettra Storage Ring
122
This paper presents the first experiences acquired with the new eBPM system based on pilot tone compensation, developed for Elettra 2.0. After the successful delivery of seven complete systems, belonging to a pre-series production within the signed partnership with Instrumentation Technologies, we started their integration in the current machine, in order to gain experience and develop all the functionalities required for the future commissioning of the new accelerator, scheduled for 2026. To do so, an entire section of Elettra storage ring has been equipped with the new systems: eight Libera Electron units have been replaced by eight Pilot Tone Front End (PTFE) and four digital platforms (DAQ10SX). Tests were carried out during dedicated machine shifts, focusing on integration with the new global orbit feedback at different data rates (10 kHz, 100 kHz and turn-by-turn), with and without pilot tone compensation. Nevertheless, triggered acquisitions were made in order to test first turn capability of the system. Another unit has been attached to a pair of spare pick-ups (low-gap BPMs), in order to continue the development of new features and to provide different types of data (raw ADC data, turn-by-turn calculated positions, etc.) for machine physics studies, even during user-dedicated shifts.
Paper: TUP31
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP31
About: Received: 30 Aug 2024 — Revised: 07 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 08 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP33
Cherenkov Diffraction Radiation Beam Position studies at Diamond Light Source
126
This paper will show beam position studies performed using a Cherenkov Diffraction Radiation (ChDR) based Beam Position Monitor (BPM) at Diamond Light Source (DLS). Displaying the characterisation of the BPM using the 3 GeV electron beam at DLS and comparing the effectiveness of this prototype to an existing Inductive Beam Position Monitor (IBPM) in use in the DLS Booster To Storage (BTS) transfer line. The functionality of the BPM is explored, utilising both wideband and narrowband ChDR emission with the application of filters to the ChDR detection system.
Paper: TUP33
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP33
About: Received: 06 Sep 2024 — Revised: 13 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 13 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
Intermediate stage amplifier electronics for HIAF ring beam diagnostic system
This article introduces the intermediate stage amplifier electronics for the HIAF Ring beam diagnostic system, it has intermediate stage amplifier, high-impedance preamplifier gain switching control, self-check, fiber communication, and enthernet communication functions. The intermediate stage amplifier has 4 channels, each channel has three gain states: 20dB, 0dB, -20dB, combining with preamplifier which has 2 gain states (30dB and 0 dB), 6 gain states can be got to make the signal magnitude input to BPM electronics falls in optimal range for ADC sampling as possible. According to simulation result, the maximum voltage of BPM induction signal could exceed 40V with 50Ω impedance, so a low reflection low-pass filter is placed before amplifier to avoid the devices damage and signal reflection, the filter bandwidth is 10MHz and it can attenuate the peak voltage by half at shortest beam signal while S11<-25dB. Electronics integrates two 8-pole LEMO connectors as control outputs to control the preamplifier gain state. The self-check signal is generated by an active crystal oscillator, and injected into 4 channels by 4 drivers. Optoelectronic converter, electro-optic converter and ethernet module are integrated to achieve remote communication. All control logic and communication is realized by an Actel FPGA chip.
TUP35
Current status of the manufacturing and testing of the BPM electronics for ELETTRA 2.0
130
In this paper we are presenting the status of the partnership between Instrumentation Technologies and Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste for the realization of 200 BPM electronics for ELETTRA 2.0. Last year, 200 Pilot Tone Front-End (PTFE) units were successfully developed and produced. During the present year, 100 Digital Acquisition platforms, each one used to digitize and process the signals from two BPM pickups, are in production after the successful pre-series tests. Elettra Sincrotrone Trieste was more involved in concept design, prototype development, and firmware programming, while Instrumentation Technologies was focused on design for manufacturing, implemented rigorous testing procedures, and handled the production. During the project, it was also necessary to overcome a period of material shortages, particularly for the chips used in the digital part. Testing during the pre-series and series production phases ensured that each unit met the desired performance criteria necessary for stabilizing long-term measurement drifts in BPM systems. Additional units were produced to account for potential failures and performance variations, ensuring that all units delivered performed to specification.
Paper: TUP35
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP35
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 08 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 08 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP37
Electronic test bench for the validation of myrrha BPM ac-quisition systems
134
MYRRHA (Multi-Purpose Hybrid Research Reactor for High-Tech Applications) aims to demonstrate the feasibility of high-level nuclear waste transmutation at industrial scale. MYRRHA Facility aims to accelerate 4 mA proton beam up to 600 MeV. Beam Position monitors are key elements in many accelerators. for instance, once BPMs are installed along a linear accelerator or a storage ring, they remain inaccessible for any validation of updated or rejuvenated electronics. this paper addresses this issue with the realisation of an electronic test bench simulating the outputs signals of BPM electrodes for a given beam energy, phase and position. the bench is realized for MYRRHA BPMs and it offers simulated beams with a position precision down to 50μm and phase precision down to 0.5° on a wide range.
Paper: TUP37
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP37
About: Received: 30 Aug 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 09 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP38
Development of a beam position monitor for MYRRHA high energy beams
138
MYRRHA (Multi-Purpose Hybrid Research Reactor for High-Tech Applications) aims to demonstrate the feasibility of high-level nuclear waste transmutation at industrial scale. MYRRHA Facility aims to accelerate 4 mA proton beam up to 600 MeV. The accurate tuning of LINAC is essential for the operation of MYRRHA and requires measurement of the beam transverse position and shape, the phase of the beam with respect to the radiofrequency voltage with the help of Beam Position Monitor (BPM) system. MYRRHA is divided in two phases, the first phase, called MINERVA, includes several sections allowing beam acceleration up to 100 MeV. the second phase includes a High Energy Beam Transport (HEBT) line up to 600MeV. A BPM prototype was realized for the HEBT line. This paper addresses the design, realization, and calibration of this BPMs and its associated electronics. The characterization of the beam shape is performed by means of a test bench allowing a position mapping with a resolution of 0.02 mm.
Paper: TUP38
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP38
About: Received: 30 Aug 2024 — Revised: 12 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP40
Progress of low-β BPM calibration based on helical slow-wave structure
142
Beam Position Monitors (BPMs) are essential in parti-cle accelerators for the precise measurement of beam trajectories. Considering the inherent inaccuracies in manufacturing and assembly, rigorous offline calibration processes are essential to guarantee the precision of beam position measurements. The predominant calibration technique, specifically the wire test method, is tailored for relativistic beams and is inappropriate for low-β beams. This manuscript introduces an innovative ap-proach employing a helical slow-wave structure to emu-late the electromagnetic fields of low-energy beams, thus facilitating the calibration of BPMs for low-β scenarios. Employing a helix-based calibration platform, we con-ducted the calibration of the nonlinear response of BPMs at the Xi'an Proton Application Facility for a 7 MeV pro-ton beam, with results aligning with the simulation. This advancement expands the precision and range of beam position measurements, substantially enhancing the op-eration and optimization of particle accelerators.
Paper: TUP40
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP40
About: Received: 03 Sep 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 09 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP41
Test of BPM cables vs temperature and humidity
145
Measuring the absolute position of the beam in the intensifier and storage ring of a high energy photon source (HEPS) requires measuring the offset between the electrical and mechanical centers of the beam position monitor (BPM). In the HEPS project, a four-electrode BPM is used, and the signals from each of the four electrodes of the BPM probe are led out by a cable. During the operation of the intensifier and storage ring, the influence of ambient temperature and humidity on the BPM cable and the difference between the four channels will directly lead to changes in the BPM measurement results. In this paper, vector network analyzer (VNA) is used to test the data of signal amplitude change of two BPM cables within ten hours when temperature and humidity change. The conclusion is that the influence of temperature on the signal is about 0.01 dB/℃, the influence of humidity on the signal is about 0.05 dB/10%, and the relative change between channels is about 5%.
Paper: TUP41
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP41
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 12 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 12 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP43
Bunch-by-bunch beam position measurements at PETRA III
149
The PETRA IV project is set to enhance the current PETRA III synchrotron into an ultra-low-emittance source. The reduced emittance will impose stringent requirements on machine stability and operation. In order to cope with these requirements, bunch-by-bunch information is required from most of the monitor systems. For precise monitoring of beam position and charge, the Libera Digit 500 instrument was tested as a readout electronics for BPMs at the existing machine PETRA III. This system features four channels with a 500 MHz sampling rate, synchronized with the accelerator's RF, enabling observation of beam properties with a bunch-by-bunch resolution, thus facilitating a more comprehensive understanding of beam behavior. This contribution provides an overview of the latest beam measurements at the single bunch level, allowing observation of beam oscillations and injection dynamics.
Paper: TUP43
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP43
About: Received: 06 Sep 2024 — Revised: 07 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 07 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP44
SOLEIL II BPM: design, simulations and button prototyping.
154
SOLEIL II is the low emittance upgrade project for Synchrotron SOLEIL, targeting an emittance of ~80 pm.rad. The new lattice includes 180 Beam Position Monitors (BPM). Due to the different constraints on the magnet yokes, beam stay clear and synchrotron radiation, 3 different types of BPM will be installed on the storage ring with inner diameter distributed between 16 and 24 mm. Electromagnetic and thermal simulations have been conducted to validate the designs. Manufacturing the feedthroughs is a challenge due to the conical shape of the button and the small (200 µm) thickness of the gap with the BPM body. Prototypes of the button have been made by two different manufacturers, and possibilities for improvement identified. These prototypes will test in the current machine to validate the simulation results. This paper presents the designs, summarizes the results of the simulations, and describes the metrology process and results of the two batches of feedthroughs.
Paper: TUP44
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP44
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 09 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 09 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP45
The design and accurate calibration of HIAF-Ring BPM
158
Beam Position Monitors (BPM) are the non-destructive monitors used most frequently at nearly all linacs, cyclotrons, and synchrotrons. The most basic function of BPM is to provide the accurate position of the centre of mass of the beam for closed orbit feedback and other demands. However, due to the error of actual processing, the k value and the actual electric center will be different with the ideal k value and electric center of BPM, which requires us to accurately measure the k value and offset value of each set of BPM offline. There are 72 sets of BPMs in HIAF BRing & SRing, with 10 specifications and plate radius ranging from 180mm to 330mm, but the shape and size of the front and back pipes connected to bpms are variety during actual installation. Based on theoretical analysis, the k value and offset value of the BPM which electrode plates are too close to the flange are greatly affected by the pipes connected to bpm at both ends, and the measurement error can even reach 9mm. Therefore, this paper takes HIAF BRing and SRing BPM calibration as examples to explain how to accurately calibrate BPM.
Paper: TUP45
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP45
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 10 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 11 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
TUP46
Design and deployment of an in-vacuum Electro-Optic BPM at the CERN SPS
161
Accurate monitoring and control of charged particle beams at the HL-LHC demands the development of new beam diagnostics tools. This poster provides an overview of the electro-optic beam position monitor (EO-BPM), currently taking measurements at CERN's SPS. This device uses the Pockels effect to monitor the transverse position and instabilities in the particle beam. Comprising of a laser source, electro-optic crystal, optical system, and a fast photodetector, the EO-BPM operates by generating a modulated optical signal directly linked to the propagating electric field of the beam. The EO-BPM is designed as a self containing button with fibre-coupled laser connected to the crystal inside and a fibre coupled Mach-Zehnder interferometer yielding sum and difference signals on the outside. A segment of the SPS beam pipe is fitted with a mount to connect the button, allowing the electric field induced by the particle beam to be captured and transferred to the electro-optic crystal. The goal is to gain insight into the transverse position along the bunch and the identification of intra-bunch instabilities, contributing to precision in beam monitoring and control.
Paper: TUP46
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP46
About: Received: 05 Sep 2024 — Revised: 07 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 08 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024
Research on X-ray beam position front-end electronics based on diamond detectors
This project aims to collect high-frequency high-precision data from the weak current signals generated by the quadrant-type diamond detector used for high-precision beam position monitoring. The main approach is to design a current conversion amplification circuit based on the theory of high-resistance I-V weak current to achieve fast conversion and collection of the four-channel weak current with large dynamic range and multiple ranges at high frequency, with the highest precision reaching the pA level. The circuit uses the ADA4530-1 amplifier with extremely low input bias current budget to complete the front-end circuit setup. The circuit's bandwidth is simulated and analyzed, with the bandwidth limited to 159 Hz. The design uses a protection ring design, a three-axis BNC connection, and a custom shielded box to enhance the shielding performance of the measurement system. The output signal is converted to a 24-bit high-precision analog-to-digital signal by the AD7172-2, and further connected to the core control board for signal closed-loop control to achieve overall isolation of the analog and digital circuits. The final experimental test shows that the detection sensitivity of the circuit for pA-level weak currents is 9.7936 mV/pA, and the error of the circuit is 1.3% when the weak current is greater than 10 pA, which can meet the demand for beam position measurement in the stable beam system.
Study and FPGA implementation of BPM algorithm for synchronized light source
Beam Position Monitor (BPM) system is an important part of the beam measurement system, which plays a vital role in the stable operation of the accelerator. In this paper, based on the requirement of high resolution of the BPM system, the DBPM algorithm is implemented on Matlab and FPGA, firstly, the overall design of the DBPM algorithm is introduced; secondly, the implementation method of each module is elaborated in detail; and again, the existing simulation data and the beam current data are simulated in the Matlab and Modelsim environments respectively, using the quadrature demodulation and Moving Average Filter; finally,do offline testing based on this DBPM algorithm Experimental. Results show that the quadrature demodulation algorithm incorporating a sliding average filter has higher positional resolution.
BPM-based electron beam trajectory optimization at PITZ
The Photo Injector Test Facility at DESY in Zeuthen (PITZ) has been developing high brightness electron sources for the XUV and soft X-ray free-electron facility (FLASH) and the European X-Ray Free Electron Laser facility (EuXFEL) at Hamburg. Its research fields have expanded into applications in recent years like THz FELs, and radiation biology for cancer treatment. Since the applications require varying beam parameters(bunch charge from <10 pC up to 4 nC, momentum from 6 MeV/c up to 22 MeV/c), a robust and reliable beam trajectory recovery and correction algorithm has been developed, which allows to fast establish and/or recover a quasi-optimal performance for different experiments. One of the key functions is to make certain quadrupoles steering-free, which is critical for THz FELs and radiation experiments. It also provides a detailed beam trajectory overview by fitting the beam positions measured at beam position monitors (BPMs) using the response matrices and with the earth magnetic fields (EMF) considered, providing a deeper understanding of the intermediate beam trajectory and enabling efficient corrections. In this poster, the analytical model, the robustness test and the experimental performance of this tool will be presented.
TUP55
Design of the BPM button for ALBA II
174
As many other light sources, ALBA is also going through an upgrade phase leading to ALBA II. In this context, new Beam Position Monitors (BPMs) have to be designed to fit the reduced vacuum chamber. The buttons and the block were designed to be as compact as possible minimizing the impedance to avoid overheat and maintaining a good signal level. Different shapes and materials were simulated and the best were selected to be produced as prototype. In this proceeding, we present the design process and the simulations that lead to the ALBA II BPM button design.
Paper: TUP55
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IBIC2024-TUP55
About: Received: 04 Sep 2024 — Revised: 07 Sep 2024 — Accepted: 07 Sep 2024 — Issue date: 17 Sep 2024