Title :
Integrated normal-conducting/superconducting high-power proton linac for the APT project
Author :
Lawrence, G.P. ; Wangler, T.P.
Author_Institution :
Los Alamos Nat. Lab., NM, USA
Abstract :
The baseline accelerator design for the APT (Accelerator Production of Tritium) Project is a normalconducting-superconducting proton linac that produces a CW beam power of 170 MW at 1700 MeV. Compared with the previous all-NC linac design, the NC/SC linac provides significant power savings and lower operating and capital costs. It allows a much larger aperture at high energies, and permits greater operational flexibility. The design has been approved by high-level technical panels and is published in a Conceptual Design Report. The high-energy portion is a superconducting (SC) RF linac employing elliptical-type niobium cavities, while the low-energy portion is a normal-conducting (NC) linac constructed from copper cavities. This provides an integrated accelerator design that makes optimum use of the two technologies in their appropriate regions of application. The NC linac, which consists of an injector, RFQ, CCDTL, and CCL, accelerates a 100-mA beam to 217 MeV. The SC linac is built in two sections optimized for different beam velocity spans, with each section made up of cryomodules containing 5-cell cavities and SC singlet quads in a FODO focusing lattice. Alternate SC linac designs are being studied that employ a doublet focusing lattice using conventional quadrupoles located between cryomodules
Keywords :
accelerator cavities; linear accelerators; proton accelerators; superconducting cavity resonators; 170 MW; 1700 MeV; APT project; Accelerator Production of Tritium; FODO focusing lattice; baseline accelerator design; conventional quadrupoles; cryomodules; doublet focusing lattice; elliptical-type niobium cavities; integrated normal-conducting/superconducting high-power proton linac; normalconducting-superconducting proton linac; Apertures; Copper; Costs; Lattices; Linear particle accelerator; Niobium; Particle beams; Production; Proton accelerators; Radio frequency;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 1997. Proceedings of the 1997
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4376-X
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.1997.749960