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Recent RHIC in-situ coating technology developments

Authors :
Hershcovitch, A.
Blaskiewicz, M.
Brennan, J. M.
Chawla, A.
Fischer, W.
Liaw, C-J
Meng, W.
Todd, R.
Custer, A.
Erickson, M.
Jamshidi, N.
Kobrin, P.
Laping, R.
Poole, H. J.
Jimenez, J. M.
Neupert, H.
Taborelli, M.
Yin-Vallgren, C.
Sochugov, N.
Source :
CERN Yellow Report CERN-2013-002, pp.251-258
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

To rectify the problems of electron clouds observed in RHIC and unacceptable ohmic heating for superconducting magnets that can limit future machine upgrades, we started developing a robotic plasma deposition technique for $in-situ$ coating of the RHIC 316LN stainless steel cold bore tubes based on staged magnetrons mounted on a mobile mole for deposition of Cu followed by amorphous carbon (a-C) coating. The Cu coating reduces wall resistivity, while a-C has low SEY that suppresses electron cloud formation. Recent RF resistivity computations indicate that 10 {\mu}m of Cu coating thickness is needed. But, Cu coatings thicker than 2 {\mu}m can have grain structures that might have lower SEY like gold black. A 15-cm Cu cathode magnetron was designed and fabricated, after which, 30 cm long samples of RHIC cold bore tubes were coated with various OFHC copper thicknesses; room temperature RF resistivity measured. Rectangular stainless steel and SS discs were Cu coated. SEY of rectangular samples were measured at room; and, SEY of a disc sample was measured at cryogenic temperatures.<br />Comment: 8 pages, contribution to the Joint INFN-CERN-EuCARD-AccNet Workshop on Electron-Cloud Effects: ECLOUD'12; 5-9 Jun 2012, La Biodola, Isola d'Elba, Italy

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
CERN Yellow Report CERN-2013-002, pp.251-258
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1308.0125
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5170/CERN-2013-002.251