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Application of a sawtooth surface to accelerator beam chambers with low electron emission rate

Authors :
S. Endo
N. Satoh
N. Kato
T. Nishidono
M. Tsuchiya
T. Yokoyama
Yusuke Suetsugu
Source :
Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A: Vacuum, Surfaces, and Films. 21:186-195
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
American Vacuum Society, 2003.

Abstract

One of the latest problems in positron or proton accelerators is a single-beam instability due to an electron cloud around the beam. The instability, for an example, causes a beam size blow up of the positron beam and deteriorates the performance of the electron-positron collider. the seed of the electron cloud is the electrons emitted from the surface of the beam chamber, which consists of electrons due to the synchrotron radiation (photoelectrons) and sometimes those multiplied by the multipactoring. Suppressing the electron emission from the surface is, therefore, an essential way to cure the instability. Here a rough surface with a sawtooth structure (sawtooth surface) is proposed to reduce the electron emission from the surface of the beam chamber. A new rolling-tap method is developed for this study to make the sawtooth surface in a circular beam chamber with a length of several meters. The first experiment using a test chamber at a photon beam line of the KEK Photon Factory verifies its validity. The photoelectron emission from the sawtooth surface reduces by one order of magnitude compared to the usual smooth surface. In the second experiment under a bunched positron beam in the KEK B-Factory, however, the electron emission is comparable to that of a smooth surface and the behavior is quite different from the previous one. The reason is that the beam field excites the multipactoring of electrons and the decrease of the photoelectron emission by the sawtooth surface is wiped out. The sawtooth surface will be effective to reduce the electron emission under the situation with external magnetic fields or without strong beam fields where the electron multipactoring hardly occurs.

Details

ISSN :
15208559 and 07342101
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology A: Vacuum, Surfaces, and Films
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........2125b66759afd7afea2e60d8f1e3bbd5