Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Oct 2012)

Advanced photoinjector experiment photogun commissioning results

  • F. Sannibale,
  • D. Filippetto,
  • C. F. Papadopoulos,
  • J. Staples,
  • R. Wells,
  • B. Bailey,
  • K. Baptiste,
  • J. Corlett,
  • C. Cork,
  • S. De Santis,
  • S. Dimaggio,
  • L. Doolittle,
  • J. Doyle,
  • J. Feng,
  • D. Garcia Quintas,
  • G. Huang,
  • H. Huang,
  • T. Kramasz,
  • S. Kwiatkowski,
  • R. Lellinger,
  • V. Moroz,
  • W. E. Norum,
  • H. Padmore,
  • C. Pappas,
  • G. Portmann,
  • T. Vecchione,
  • M. Vinco,
  • M. Zolotorev,
  • F. Zucca

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.15.103501
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 10
p. 103501

Abstract

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The Advanced Photoinjector Experiment (APEX) at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory is dedicated to the development of a high-brightness high-repetition rate (MHz-class) electron injector for x-ray free-electron laser (FEL) and other applications where high repetition rates and high brightness are simultaneously required. The injector is based on a new concept rf gun utilizing a normal-conducting (NC) cavity resonating in the VHF band at 186 MHz, and operating in continuous wave (cw) mode in conjunction with high quantum efficiency photocathodes capable of delivering the required charge at MHz repetition rates with available laser technology. The APEX activities are staged in three phases. In phase 0, the NC cw gun is built and tested to demonstrate the major milestones to validate the gun design and performance. Also, starting in phase 0 and continuing in phase I, different photocathodes are tested at the gun energy and at full repetition rate for validating candidate materials to operate in a high-repetition rate FEL. In phase II, a room-temperature pulsed linac is added for accelerating the beam at several tens of MeV to reduce space charge effects and allow the measurement of the brightness of the beam from the gun when integrated in an injector scheme. The installation of the phase 0 beam line and the commissioning of the VHF gun are completed, phase I components are under fabrication, and initial design and specification of components and layout for phase II are under way. This paper presents the phase 0 commissioning results with emphasis on the experimental milestones that have successfully demonstrated the APEX gun capability of operating at the required performance.