N. Mounet and E. Mtral - ICE meeting - 16/03/201 General wall impedance theory for 2D axisymmetric...

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N. Mounet and E. Métral - ICE meeting - 16/03/20 1 General wall impedance theory for 2D axisymmetric and flat multilayer structures N. Mounet and E. Métral Acknowledgements: N. Biancacci, F. Caspers, A. Koschik, G. Rumolo, B. Salvant, B. Zotter.

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N. Mounet and E. Métral - ICE meeting - 16/03/203 Two dimensional models  Ideas: consider a longitudinally smooth element in the ring, of infinite length, with a point-like particle (source) travelling near its center, along its axis and with constant velocity v, integrate the electromagnetic (EM) force experienced by a test particle with the same velocity as the source, over a finite length.  Neglect thus all edge effects → get only resistive effects (or effects coming from permittivity & permeability of the structure) as opposed to geometric effects (from edges, tapering, etc.). Main advantage: for simple geometries, EM fields obtained (semi-) analytically without any other assumptions (frequency, velocity, material properties – except linearity, isotropy and homogeneity).

Transcript of N. Mounet and E. Mtral - ICE meeting - 16/03/201 General wall impedance theory for 2D axisymmetric...

Page 1: N. Mounet and E. Mtral - ICE meeting - 16/03/201 General wall impedance theory for 2D axisymmetric and flat multilayer structures N. Mounet and E. Mtral.

N. Mounet and E. Métral - ICE meeting - 16/03/20 1

General wall impedance theory for 2D axisymmetric and flat

multilayer structures

N. Mounet and E. Métral

Acknowledgements: N. Biancacci, F. Caspers, A. Koschik, G. Rumolo, B. Salvant, B. Zotter.

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Context and motivation

Beam-coupling impedances & wake fields (i.e. electromagnetic forces on a particle due to another passing particle) are a source of instabilities / heat load.

In the LHC, low revolution frequency and low conductivity material used in collimators → classic thick wall formula (discussed e.g. in Chao’s book) for the impedance not valid e.g. at the first unstable betatron line (~ 8kHz):

need a general formalism with less assumptions on the material and frequency range to compute impedances (also for e.g. ceramic collimator, ferrite kickers).

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Two dimensional modelsIdeas:

• consider a longitudinally smooth element in the ring, of infinite length, with a point-like particle (source) travelling near its center, along its axis and with constant velocity v,

• integrate the electromagnetic (EM) force experienced by a test particle with the same velocity as the source, over a finite length.

Neglect thus all edge effects → get only resistive effects (or effects coming from permittivity & permeability of the structure) as opposed to geometric effects (from edges, tapering, etc.).

Main advantage: for simple geometries, EM fields obtained (semi-) analytically without any other assumptions (frequency, velocity, material properties – except linearity, isotropy and homogeneity).

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Multilayer cylindrical chamber (Zotter formalism)

Chamber cross section

Source (in frequency domain, k= /v) decomposed into azimuthal modes:

vk where is the wave number.

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Multilayer cylindrical chamber: Zotter formalism (CERN AB-2005-043)

For each azimuthal mode we write Maxwell equations in each layer (in frequency domain)

where c and are general frequency dependent permittivity and permeability (including conductivity).

Taking the curl of the 3rd equation and injecting the 1st and the 2nd ones:

Taking the curl of the 2nd equation and injecting the 3rd and the 4th ones:

with

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Multilayer cylindrical chamber: longitudinal components

Along the longitudinal axis → “simple” (uncoupled) Helmholtz equations:

For Es the equation is inhomogeneous (right-hand side is the driving term from the beam), but homogeneous for Hs.

Outside ring-shaped source ρm → homogeneous → separation of variables:

→ get harmonic differential equations for both Θ and S.

sSrREsss EEEs and sSrRH

sss HHHs

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Multilayer cylindrical chamber : longitudinal components

From symmetry with respect to the θ=0 (mod π) plane, translation invariance of vector , and invariance w.r.t :

Up to now, no boundary condition have been used, and the integers me and mh are not necessarily equal to m.

Reinjecting those into the Helmholtz equations for Es and Hs, we get Bessel’s equation (here written for Es):

sek2

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Multilayer cylindrical chamber : longitudinal components

Introducing the radial propagation constant

→ are modified Bessel functions of order me and mh.

→ There are 4 integration constants per layer: CIe , CKe , CIh and CKh.

rKCrICemH

rKCrICemE

hh

ee

mKhmIhjks

hs

mKemIejks

es

sin

cos

ck 22

hhee mmmm KIKI and , ,

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Multilayer cylindrical chamber : transverse components

In each layer, all the transverse components can be obtained from the longitudinal ones: reinjecting Es and Hs into the 2nd and 3rd Maxwell equations and using again the invariance properties along the s axis:

Superscript (p) indicates quantities taken in the cylindrical layer p.

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Multilayer field matching 4(N+1) integration constants to determine from field matching (continuity of the tangential field components) between adjacent layers:

4 more equations at r=a1 (continuity of Es and Hs at the ring-shaped source, and two additional relations for dEs /dr and dHs /dr by integration of the wave equations between r=a1-δa1 and r=a1+δa1).

Fields should stay finite at r=0 and r=∞ → take away constants CKe and CKh in the first layer, and CIe and CIh in the last one → only 4N unknowns.

Except for p=0 (surface charge & current at the ring-shaped source) → 4(N-1) equations.

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But … what about those azimuthal mode numbers ? There are still those integers me and mh to determine in each layer !

To ”everybody” it looked like those had to be necessarily equal to the initial azimuthal mode number of the ring-shaped source, m (see R. Gluckstern, B. Zotter, etc.). They did not even mention that there is something to prove here…

Using the field matching relations of the previous slide, it is actually possible (and lengthy) to prove that in any layer

me = mh = m

This has to do with the axisymmetry → if no axisymmetry, there would be some coupling between different azimuthal modes.

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Multilayer field matching: Matrix formalism In the initial formalism, solves “with brute force” the full system of equations (4N eqs., 4N unknowns) computationally heavy for more than 2 layers. But we can relate constants between adjacent layers with 4x4 matrices:

In the end, with the conditions in the first and last layers:

where Mp+1,p is an explicit 4x4 matrix, and CIg=c CIh , CKg=c CKh

with,

0

10

0

)1(

1

022

0

)1(

)(

)(

Ig

mm

Ie

NKg

NKe

C

kaIQjC

M

C

C

“Source” term, due to the beam (from matching at r=a1)

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Multilayer field matching: Matrix formalism To solve the full problem, only need to multiply (N -1) 4x4 matrices and invert explicitly a 2x2 matrix: in the vacuum region

Still some numerical accuracy problems, so need to do this with high precision real numbers (35 digits, typically).

Note: other similar matrix formalisms developed independently in H. Hahn, PRSTAB 13 (2010), M. Ivanyan et al, PRSTAB 11 (2008), N. Wang et al, PRSTAB 10 (2007)

13313311

133233121

022

0)1(

1 MMMMMMMMkaIQjC m

mIe

TM(m)= the only “wall” constant (frequency dependent) needed to compute the impedance.1 if m=0, 0 otherwise

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Total fields: multimode extension of Zotter’s formalism

Up to now we obtained the EM fields of one single azimuthal mode m.

Sum all the modes to get the total fields due to the point-like source:

and (m) are constants (still dependent on ).

First term = direct space-charge → get the direct space-charge for point-like particles (fully analytical).

Infinite sum = “wall” part (due to the chamber). Reduces to its first two terms in the linear region where ka1 / << 1 and kr / << 1.

022

0

1 m

Qj

C

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Cylindrical chamber wall impedance Total impedance: EM force on a test particle in (r=a2, ), in frequency domain, integrated over some length L (length of the element), normalized by the source and test charges (+ some sign / phase):

Taking the linear terms only, the “wall” impedances are then (x1 = source coordinate, x2 = test coordinate)

New quadrupolar term

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Cylindrical chamber EM fields results Example: Fields in a two layers round graphite collimator (b=2mm) surrounded

by stainless steel, created by the mode m=1 of a 1C charge (energy 450 GeV) with a1=10m:

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Cylindrical chamber wall impedance results• For 3 layers (m-copper coated round graphite collimator surrounded by

stainless steel, at 450 GeV with b=2mm), dipolar and quadrupolar impedances (per unit length):

New quadrupolar impedance small except at very high frequencies.

Importance of the wall impedance (= resistive-wall + indirect space-charge) at low frequencies, where perfect conductor part cancels out with magnetic images (F. Roncarolo et al, PRSTAB 2009).

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Comparison with other formalisms• In the single-layer and two-layer case, some comparisons done in E. Métral,

B. Zotter and B. Salvant, PAC’07 and in E. Métral, PAC’05.

• For 3 layers (see previous slide), comparison with Burov-Lebedev formalism (EPAC’02, p. 1452) for the resistive-wall dipolar impedance (per unit length):

Close agreement, except:

at very high frequency (expected from BL theory),

at very low frequency (need to be checked).

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Longitudinal impedance at low frequency (F. Caspers’ question)

• For a 1 layer LHC round graphite collimator (b=2mm), longitudinal impedance per unit length goes to zero at low frequency:

The imaginary part has to be antisymmetric with respect to → Im(Z||)=0 is forced.

But the real part has to be symmetric.

Re(Z||)=0 means zero power loss at

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EM fields at low frequency (F. Caspers’ question)• For a 1 layer LHC round graphite collimator (b=2mm) at injection, EM fields at

the surface of the wall, vs. frequency (note: G=0 c H):

All the electric field components go to zero in the wall, at low frequencies → no heat load since no current density (from Ohm’s law),

From symmetry considerations, in our 2D model Es has to be zero at DC → zero longitudinal impedance.

If it’s non zero “in real life”, it has to come from 3D (e.g. EM fields trapped when beam enters a structure)

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Impedance at high frequency Why is it that the beam-coupling impedance always go to zero at high

frequency ?

Answer: there is no more induced currents in the wall at high frequency, because the EM fields from the beam (=direct space-charge, i.e. the fields present if no boundary was there) decays before reaching the wall:

→ decays in a length ~/ k , so angular frequency cutoff around

(b = wall radius)

Frequency cutoff typically around GHz for low energy machines, and 10THz for LHC collimators of 2mm radius, at injection.

bc

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Multilayer flat chamber

Chamber cross section (no a priori top-bottom symmetry)

Source (in frequency domain) decomposed using an horizontal Fourier transform:

Source used~

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Multilayer flat chamber: outline of the theory

For each horizontal wave number kx, solve Maxwell equations in a similar way as what was done in the cylindrical case, in cartesian coordinates (with source = ) → separation of variables, harmonic differential equations in each layer.

Same kind of considerations for the horizontal wave number kx (all equal in the layers) + field matching with matrix formalism (two 4x4 matrices in the end, one for the upper layers and one for the lower layers).

Longitudinal electric field component in vacuum, for a given kx:

~

2

221

022

0 and1

with

kkkQjx

)(y

m

C Constants (depend on and kx, obtained from field matching)

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Multilayer flat chamber: integration over kx

Next step is to integrate over kx to get the total fields from the initial point-like source (equivalent of multimode summation in cylindrical)

The last term in Es can be integrated exactly: in both layers 1 and -1

→ this is the direct-space charge (see cylindrical).

The other two terms (“wall” part of the fields) are a much bigger problem: the integration constants are highly complicated functions of kx . We could get numerically the fields but computation would have to be done for each x, y, y1 and → really heavy.

Somehow, we would like to sort out the dependence in the source and test particles positions.

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Multilayer flat chamber: integration over kx

The great thing is that we can transform

into

with mn given by (numerically computable) integrals over kx of (complicated) frequency dependent quantities. To do so:

- Transform (x,y) to cylindrical coordinate (r,),- Make a Fourier series decomposition,

- Demonstrate and use

- Use

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Flat chamber wall impedance• Direct space-charge impedances are the same as in the cylindrical case (as expected).

• From wall part (infinite sums) → get wall impedance in linear region where ky1 /and kr /<< 1 (x1 & y1 and x2 & y2 = positions of the source and test particles):

Quadrupolar terms not exactly opposite to one another (≠ A. Burov –V. Danilov, PRL 1999, ultrarelativistic case)

+ Constant term in vertical when no top-bottom symmetry:

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Comparison to Tsutsui’s formalism• For 3 layers (see parameters in previous figures), comparison with

Tsuitsui’s model (LHC project note 318) on a rectangular geometry, the two other sides being taken far enough apart:

Very good agreement between the two approaches.

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Form factors between flat and cylindrical wall impedances• Ratio of flat chamber impedances w.r.t longitudinal and transverse

dipolar cylindrical ones → generalize Yokoya factors (Part. Acc., 1993, p. 511). In the case of a single-layer ceramic (hBN) at 450 GeV:

Obtain frequency dependent form factors quite ≠ from the Yokoya factors.

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Conclusion• For multilayer cylindrical chambers, Zotter formalism has been

extended to all azimuthal modes, and its implementation improved thanks to the matrix formalism for the field matching. The number of layers is no longer an issue.

• For multilayer flat chambers, a new theory similar to Zotter’s has been derived, giving also impedances without any assumptions on the materials conductivity, on the frequency or on the beam velocity (but don’t consider anomalous skin effect / magnetoresistance).

• Both these theories were benchmarked, but more is certainly to be done (e.g. vs. Piwinski and Burov-Lebedev, for flat chambers).

• New form factors between flat and cylindrical geometries were obtained, that can be quite different from Yokoya factors, as was first observed with other means by B. Salvant et al (IPAC’10, p. 2054).

• Other 2D geometries could be investigated as well.