Radio Frequency Quadrupole for Bunching Electron Beam: Electromagnetic Field, Particle Velocity Range, and Accuracy at 10 GHz ()
1. Introduction
First, we show how the ERFQ can focus and accelerate particles. Then, an approximation of the electromagnetic field is done for a rectangular standing wave structure, in the GHz region. The linearization of this analytical solution allows us to obtain the potential function from which we deduce the geometry of the electrodes. The focusing efficiency of the structure is determined and discussed. It will be shown that the Electron-RFQ is suited for input beam velocities in the range of 0.5 - 0.7 c. Lastly, the accuracy of this approach is determined using the program GdfidL [1] at 10 GHz.
2. Operating Principle of the ERFQ
2.1. Focusing
The RF Quadrupole is a waveguide composed of four electrodes. The two adjacent ones have opposite potentials. If we place electric walls on its diagonals, and magnetic walls on the other planes of symmetry, its electromagnetic propertie will not change. As a result, one needs to compute only an eighth of the whole unmodulated RFQ (see Figure 1).
During one RF half cycle, it focuses particles in one transverse plane while it defocuses them in another one. The gradient of the electric field is
(1)
where a designates the aperture radius and V0 the inter-vane voltage. After each half cycle, the sign of the gradient changes. We get an Alternating Gradient Focusing (AGF) channel that allows particle transport over a long distance through a small bore. According to the theory of AGF, a net focusing effect will occur in both transverse planes, resulting in the confinement of particle beams [2] [3] [4] [5] [6].
2.2. Emergence of an Axial Field Ez
The RFQ described above cannot accelerate particles if the electrode surfaces do not change along the z-axis. This is due to the fact that it does not have an axial
electric field. Therefore, we have to modulate the vanes with a displacement of the one-half period between two adjacent electrodes (see Figure 2) [2] - [7].
Here, the cell length is defined as the half modulation period. The modulation factor m is the fraction of the maximum distance between the vane and the axis to the minimum distance.
3. Field Approximation in GHz Region
For frequencies greater than 1 GHz,
no longer holds and the wave equation has to be solved. The field is composed of two parts. The first one is the focusing part without acceleration, and the second one is the defocusing part with an axial electric field. The approach is the following:
· First, we approximate the focusing field with a TE mode, considering an unmodulated structure.
· Secondly, we consider a TM mode produced by the modulation [7].
· Lastly, we linearize the ERFQ field in the beam region.
The approximation is done for the main space harmonic, which interacts strongly with the particles.
3.1. TE Wave as Focusing Field
We are interested in one mode with quadrupole symmetry that focuses particles. Thus, for a transverse offset
, one gets
. With the
Bernoulli approach, it holds
(2)
The potential of the electrodes is
and does not depend on z. That is why we can neglect the z-dependence in (2): Z(z) = 1. The solution of the wave equation is a modified TE11 mode. The modification comes from the capacitive loading of the empty waveguide with electric quadrupole vanes. We get the following electric field components
(3)
where
is the free space wave number. From Faraday’s law, we can derive the magnetic field which only has a z-component
(4)
3.2. Axial Electric Field with the Vane Modulation
The modulation of the vanes will create an axial electric field. The quadrupolar symmetry must be conserved. The divergence of
vanishes, since there are no charges in the free space inside the structure. Therefore, the field generated by the modification of the electrodes can be approximated with:
(5)
where
is the cut-off wave number and
the axial spatial frequency. The ERFQ field is obtained after superposition:
,
, with the dispersion equation
.
3.3. Field Linearization in the Beam Region
By assuming that the beam radius is very small, the following linear approximation can be done, in the beam region:
In this case, the field in the RFQ can be written:
(6)
Taking the induction law
with the synchronism condition
, we obtain the magnetic field components
(7)
or in cylindric coordinate system
.
4. Potential Function and Vane Shaping
4.1. Potential Function
The following potential function can be derived from the components of the electric field:
with (8)
(9)
One sees that
(10)
With the magnetic vector potential
, one has
. It follows that
(11)
(12)
These results can be shown to satisfy
.
4.2. Vane Shaping
The electrodes build equipotential surfaces on which the potential function satisfies the following requirements
(13)
As shown before in Figure 2, it holds for a modulation factor m
(14)
A00 and A10 are given by:
(15)
If the three parameters
,
, and m are known, the vane surfaces can be designed by solving Equation (13).
4.3. Interpretation of the RFQ Parameters A00 and A10
We can observe that the two parameters A00 and A10 have great importance for the RFQ. A00 is related to the focusing and A10 is associated with the acceleration. Let us consider the quadrupole without vane modulation. From (1), the gradient of the electric field is
. With the modulation, the gradient becomes
(16)
The focusing efficiency
of the RFQ can be defined to be the factor that determines how good the quadrupole with modulation focuses in comparison to the unmodulated cavity:
(17)
The inequality
can be deduced. With the vane modulation, the acceleration increases and the focusing efficiency decreases. From (14), the following is derived
(18)
Defining
as the acceleration efficiency, (18) yields the following equation
. We see that: If
decreases,
increases and vice versa.
5. Electron-RFQ Is Suited for
The normalized velocity
alone does not determine the efficiency of the RFQ. Equations (15) and (17) show that for a given modulation factor m, the focusing efficiency
of the RFQ depends on the very important term
. It is true that the proton and heavy-ion RFQs are suited for low beam velocities (typically
). However, they operate at frequencies for which it holds
. For example, an ion-RFQ works at 200 MHz with an average aperture radius a = 0.4 cm, an output energy of 1750 keV (
), and a final modulation factor
. It holds, for this structure
, and one gets at its output
and
(see Figure 3).
The electron-RFQ that we propose differs from the proton and heavy-ion RFQs in some important aspects. Firstly, it operates at frequencies higher than 1 GHz with
. Secondly, in this frequency range, the inter-vane voltage is much lower than that of proton devices. Thirdly, we have the difference of mass between electron and proton. Another important aspect is that electrons are already emitted from a typical gun source with velocities approaching half the speed of light (
) [8].
From all these considerations, we deduce that the electron-RFQ will be designed in four sections. But, it works differently with respect to the structures for heavy-ion or proton. The electron-RFQ can work for
, contrary to the quadrupole for protons and heavy-ions. It can have the following applications:
Figure 3. Focusing efficiency
as function of
.
· Since the ERFQ has a Shaper and a Buncher, it can work as a prebuncher and buncher, after an rf gun. In this case, the input normalized beam velocity is
[9].
· The electron-RFQ can work as a standing wave buncher, in a bunching section of a preinjector linac, after a subharmonic prebuncher (a TM010 pillbox cavity) and a triode electron gun. In this case, the ERFQ is partially embedded in a focusing solenoid (input
) [9] [10].
For electron, the ERFQ acceleration efficiency is not high, even with a quadrupole acceleration section [11]. For electron acceleration, there are more efficient devices. However, it is a very good buncher for continuous electron beam. It also has the following advantages: large bandwidth, symmetrical beam handling in the transverse direction. It can be fabricated, even at very high frequencies, in four parts, using the micro-machining technology LIGA that consists of Deep-etched X-ray Lithography (DXRL), electroplating, and micro-molding [12] [13] [14].
6. Accuracy of the Approximation at 10 GHz
It is important to know how good our analytical field approximation is. For this reason, we consider an ERFQ with modulated vanes (see Figure 4). The electrode tips that build equipotential surfaces are plotted from Equation (13). The modulation factor is m = 1.7. The structure is quadratic with width w = 8.0169
Figure 6. Numerical verification of
,
, and
.
mm and its aperture radius is a = 4.5696 mm. With the program GdfidL, the 2π mode is computed over one period
, at 10 GHz, for a normalized phase velocity
. The planes x = 0, y = 0, z = 0, and the plane z = L represent magnetic walls: the fourth of the modulated ERFQ is sufficient for numerical computations.
Figure 4 confirms that we have an AGF channel. We can see, an electrode focusing the particles in one transverse plane while the adjacent vane defocuses them in another plane.
In Figure 5, we plot with the post-processor of GdfidL the x-component of
the electric field
, for an offset
. The field shows a linearity for
: our approximation is good enough for a beam radius
. Therefore, the field linearization in the beam region is correct, although a linear function is not a solution of the wave equation.
In Figure 6, we have the functions
,
, and
: they have the form described by Equation (6). We deduce that our approach is good. It has the advantage to give us the electromagnetic field with sufficient accuracy.
7. Conclusion
This paper has provided an analytical study of the electromagnetic field of a rectangular radio frequency quadrupole. The obtained solution has been linearized, with good accuracy, in beam-region, for frequencies higher than 1 GHz. We have seen that an RFQ is an efficient prebuncher or buncher for a continuous electron beam, and its acceleration efficiency is low. In a next article, we will present the results of beam simulations with the Particle-in-Cell Method.