Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Oct 2013)

Strategies for mitigating the ionization-induced beam head erosion problem in an electron-beam-driven plasma wakefield accelerator

  • W. An,
  • M. Zhou,
  • N. Vafaei-Najafabadi,
  • K. A. Marsh,
  • C. E. Clayton,
  • C. Joshi,
  • W. B. Mori,
  • W. Lu,
  • E. Adli,
  • S. Corde,
  • M. Litos,
  • S. Li,
  • S. Gessner,
  • J. Frederico,
  • M. J. Hogan,
  • D. Walz,
  • J. England,
  • J. P. Delahaye,
  • P. Muggli

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.16.101301
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. 101301

Abstract

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Strategies for mitigating ionization-induced beam head erosion in an electron-beam-driven plasma wakefield accelerator (PWFA) are explored when the plasma and the wake are both formed by the transverse electric field of the beam itself. Beam head erosion can occur in a preformed plasma because of a lack of focusing force from the wake at the rising edge (head) of the beam due to the finite inertia of the electrons. When the plasma is produced by field ionization from the space charge field of the beam, the head erosion is significantly exacerbated due to the gradual recession (in the beam frame) of the 100% ionization contour. Beam particles in front of the ionization front cannot be focused (guided) causing them to expand as in vacuum. When they expand, the location of the ionization front recedes such that even more beam particles are completely unguided. Eventually this process terminates the wake formation prematurely, i.e., well before the beam is depleted of its energy. Ionization-induced head erosion can be mitigated by controlling the beam parameters (emittance, charge, and energy) and/or the plasma conditions. In this paper we explore how the latter can be optimized so as to extend the beam propagation distance and thereby increase the energy gain. In particular we show that, by using a combination of the alkali atoms of the lowest practical ionization potential (Cs) for plasma formation and a precursor laser pulse to generate a narrow plasma filament in front of the beam, the head erosion rate can be dramatically reduced. Simulation results show that in the upcoming “two-bunch PWFA experiments” on the FACET facility at SLAC national accelerator laboratory the energy gain of the trailing beam can be up to 10 times larger for the given parameters when employing these techniques. Comparison of the effect of beam head erosion in preformed and ionization produced plasmas is also presented.