High Gradient Test of a Clamped, Molybdenum Iris, X-Band Accelerator Structure at NLCTA

2004 
Inspired by the very high gradients (150-195 MV/m) achieved at CERN in 30 GHz accelerator structures made with tungsten and molybdenum irises and operated with short (16 ns) rf pulses [1], an X-band (11.4 GHz) version of this structure design was built at CERN and tested at SLAC. The goals of this experiment were to provide frequency scaling data on high gradient phenomena at similar pulse lengths, and to measure the structure performance at the longer pulse lengths available at SLAC (the CLIC test facility, CTF II, could provide only 16 ns pulses for high power operation and 32 ns pulses for medium power operation). Earlier high gradient tests of 21 GHz to 39 GHz standing-wave, single cells, indicated no significant frequency dependence of the maximum obtainable surface field [2]. The X-band scaling test would check if this was true for travelling-wave, multi-cell structures as well. For the experiment, the CLIC group at CERN built a 30 cell accelerating structure that consisted of copper cells and molybdenum irises that were clamped together. The structure was mounted in a vacuum tank and installed in the Next Linear Collider Test Accelerator (NLCTA) beam line at SLAC where it was operated at high more » power for more than 700 hours. « less
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