Guangfeng Cheng
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
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Featured researches published by Guangfeng Cheng.
ieee particle accelerator conference | 2007
Robert Rimmer; Richard Bundy; Guangfeng Cheng; Gianluigi Ciovati; Edward Daly; R. Getz; J. Henry; William Hicks; Peter Kneisel; Stephen Manning; Robert Manus; Frank Marhauser; K. Smith; M. Stirbet; Larry Turlington; L. Vogel; Haipeng Wang; K.M. Wilson
We describe the activities underway at JLab to develop new CW cryomodules capable of transporting up to Ampere-levels of beam currents for use in ERLs and FELs. Goals include an efficient cell shape, high packing factor for efficient real-estate gradient and very strong HOM damping to push BBU thresholds up by two or more orders of magnitude compared to existing designs. Cavity shape, HOM damping and ancillary components are optimized for this application. Designs are being developed for low-frequency (750 MHz), Ampere-class compact FELs and for high-frequency (1.5 GHz), 100 mA configurations. These designs and concepts can easily be scaled to other frequencies. We present the results of conceptual design studies, simulations and prototype measurements. These modules are being developed for the next generation ERL based high power FELs but may be useful for other applications such as high energy light sources, electron cooling, electron-ion colliders, industrial processing etc.
ieee particle accelerator conference | 2007
Guangfeng Cheng; Edward Daly; Robert Rimmer; M. Stirbet; L. Vogel; Haipeng Wang; K.M. Wilson
For an ongoing high current cryomodule project, a total of 5 higher order mode (HOM) absorbers are required per cavity. The load is designed to absorb Radio Frequency (RF) heat induced by HOMs in a 748.5MHz cavity. Each load is targeted at a 4 kW dissipation capability. Water cooling is employed to remove the heat generated in ceramic tiles and by surface losses on the waveguide walls. A sequentially coupled RF-thermal-structural analysis was developed in ANSYS to optimize the HOM load design. Frequency-dependent dielectric material properties measured from samples and RF power spectrum calculated by the beam-cavity interaction codes were considered. The coupled field analysis capability of ANSYS avoided mapping of results between separate RF and thermal/structural simulation codes. For verification purposes, RF results obtained from ANSYS were compared to those from MAFIA, HFSS, and Microwave Studio. Good agreement was reached and this confirms that multiple-field coupled analysis is a desirable choice in analysis of HOM loads. Similar analysis could be performed on other particle accelerator components where distributed RF heating and surface current induced losses are inevitable.
IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2017
Gianluigi Ciovati; Guangfeng Cheng; Michael Drury; John Fischer; Rongli Geng
The heat load of the original cryomodules for the continuous electron beam accelerator facility is ~50% higher than the target value of 100 W at 2.07 K for refurbished cavities operating at an accelerating gradient of 12.5 MV/m. This issue is due to the quality factor of the cavities being ~50% lower in the cryomodule than when tested in a vertical cryostat, even at low RF field. Previous studies were not conclusive about the origin of the additional losses. We present the results of a systematic study of the additional losses in a five-cell cavity from a decommissioned cryomodule after attaching components, which are part of the cryomodule, such as the cold tuner, the He tank, and the cold magnetic shield, prior to cryogenic testing in a vertical cryostat. Flux-gate magnetometers and temperature sensors are used as diagnostic elements. Different cool-down procedures and tests in different residual magnetic fields were investigated during the study. Three flux-gate magnetometers attached to one of the cavities installed in the refurbished cryomodule C50-12 confirmed the hypothesis of high residual magnetic field as a major cause for the increased RF losses.
Archive | 2008
Jiaru Shi; Huaibi Chen; Chuanxiang Tang; Guangfeng Cheng; Gianluigi Ciovati; Peter Kneisel; Robert Rimmer; Gary Slack; Larry Turlington; Haipeng Wang; D. Li; Alireza Nassiri; Geoff Waldschmidt
IPAC'10, Kyoto, Japan, 23-28 May 2010 | 2010
Haipeng Wang; Guangfeng Cheng; Gianluigi Ciovati; James Henry; Peter Kneisel; Robert Rimmer; Gary Slack; Larry Turlington; Geoff Waldschmidt; Alireza Nassiri
Archive | 2009
Kai Tian; Haipeng Wang; Frank Marhauser; Guangfeng Cheng; Chuandong Zhou
Archive | 2013
Haipeng Wang; Guangfeng Cheng; Fay Hannon; Alicia Hofler; Reza Kazimi; Joe Preble; Robert Rimmer
Archive | 2009
Haipeng Wang; Guangfeng Cheng; Gianluigi Ciovati; Peter Kneisel; Robert Rimmer; Kai Tian; Larry Turlington; Alireza Nassiri; Geoff Waldschmidt
Archive | 2008
Robert Rimmer; Richard Bundy; Guangfeng Cheng; Gianluigi Ciovati; William Clemens; Edward Daly; James Henry; William Hicks; Peter Kneisel; Stephen Manning; Robert Manus; Frank Marhauser; J. Preble; Charles Reece; Karl Smith; Mircea Stirbet; Larry Turlington; Haipeng Wang; Katherine Wilson
Archive | 2015
Haipeng Wang; Guangfeng Cheng; Larry T. Turlington; Mark J. Wissmann