Jiahang Shao
Argonne National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Jiahang Shao.
Applied Physics Letters | 2014
Sergey V. Baryshev; Sergey Antipov; Jiahang Shao; C. Jing; Kenneth J. Pérez Quintero; Jiaqi Qiu; Wanming Liu; W. Gai; Alexei Kanareykin; Anirudha V. Sumant
A case performance study of a planar field emission cathode (FEC) based on nitrogen-incorporated ultrananocrystalline diamond, (N)UNCD, was carried out in an RF 1.3 GHz electron gun. The FEC was a 100 nm (N)UNCD film grown on a 20 mm diameter stainless steel disk with a Mo buffer layer. At surface gradients 45–65 MV/m, peak currents of 1–80 mA (equivalent to 0.3–25 mA/cm2) were achieved. Imaging with two YAG screens confirmed emission from the (N)UNCD surface with (1) the beam emittance of 1.5 mm × mrad/mm-rms and (2) longitudinal FWHM and rms widths of non-Gaussian energy spread of 0.7% and 11% at an electron energy of 2 MeV. Current stability was tested over the course of 36 × 103 RF pulses (equivalent to 288 × 106 GHz oscillations).
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Jiahang Shao; Sergey Antipov; Sergey V. Baryshev; Huaibi Chen; M. Conde; Darrell Doran; W. Gai; C. Jing; Wanming Liu; J. G. Power; Jiaqi Qiu; Jiaru Shi; Dan Wang; Faya Wang; C. Whiteford; Eric Wisniewski; Liling Xiao
Field emission from a solid metal surface has been continuously studied for a century over macroscopic to atomic scales. It is general knowledge that, other than the surface properties, the emitted current is governed solely by the applied electric field. A pin cathode has been used to study the dependence of field emission on stored energy in an L-band rf gun. The stored energy was changed by adjusting the axial position (distance between the cathode base and the gun back surface) of the cathode while the applied electric field on the cathode tip is kept constant. A very strong correlation of the field-emission current with the stored energy has been observed. While eliminating all possible interfering sources, an enhancement of the current by a factor of 5 was obtained as the stored energy was increased by a factor of 3. It implies that under certain circumstances a localized field emission may be significantly altered by the global parameters in a system.
ADVANCED ACCELERATOR CONCEPTS 2016: 16th Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop | 2016
Jiahang Shao; Sergey Antipov; Sergey V. Baryshev; H. B. Chen; M. Conde; Darrell Doran; W. Gai; C. Jing; W. Liu; J. G. Power; Jiaqi Qiu; Jiaru Shi; Faya Wang; C. Whiteford; Eric Wisniewski; Liling Xiao
Field emission is strongly coupled to the breakdown problem. A series of experiments is being carried out at Argonne Wakefield Accelerator Facility (AWA) using an L-band photocathode gun. Cathodes with different shapes have been tested and a dark current imaging system has been set up. Initial experiment results are presented.
Physical Review Letters | 2016
Jiahang Shao; Jiaru Shi; Sergey Antipov; Sergey V. Baryshev; Huaibi Chen; M. Conde; W. Gai; Gwanghui Ha; C. Jing; Faya Wang; Eric Wisniewski
Undesirable electron field emission (also known as dark current) in high gradient rf photocathode guns deteriorates the quality of the photoemission current and limits the operational gradient. To improve the understanding of dark current emission, a high-resolution (∼100 μm) dark current imaging experiment has been performed in an L-band photocathode gun operating at ∼100 MV/m of surface gradient. Scattered strong emission areas with high current have been observed on the cathode. The field enhancement factor β of selected regions on the cathode has been measured. The postexaminations with scanning electron microscopy and white light interferometry reveal the origins of ∼75% strong emission areas overlap with the spots where rf breakdown has occurred.
international vacuum nanoelectronics conference | 2016
Sergey V. Baryshev; C. Jing; Jiaqi Qiu; Sergey Antipov; Vadim Jabotinski; Jiahang Shao; W. Gai; Anirudha V. Sumant
Radiofrequency (RF) electron guns work by establishing an RF electromagnetic field inside a cavity having conducting walls. Electrons from a cathode are generated in the injector and immediately become accelerated by the RF electric field, and exit the gun as a series of electron bunches. Finding simple solutions for electron injection is a long standing problem. While energies of 30-50 MeV are achievable in linear accelerators (linacs), finding an electron source able to survive under MW electric loads and provide an average current of 1-10 mA is important. Meeting these requirements would open various linac applications for industry. The natural way to simplify and integrate RF injector architectures with the electron source would be to place the source directly into the RF cavity with no need for additional heaters/lasers. Euclid TechLabs in collaboration with Argonne National Lab are prototyping a family of highly effective field emission electron sources based on a nitrogen-incorporated ultrananocrystalline diamond ((N)UNCD) platform. Determined metrics suggest that our emitters are emissive enough to meet requirements for magnetized cooling at electron-ion colliders, linac-based radioisotope production and X-ray sterilization, and others.
5th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'14), Dresden, Germany, June 15-20, 2014 | 2014
Jiahang Shao; Huaibi Chen; Wei Gai; C. Jing; Jiaru Shi; Faya Wang; Liling Xiao
RF breakdown in high gradient accelerating structures is a fundamental problem that is still needed better understanding. Past studies have indicated that field emission, which is usually represented by electric field enhancement (i.e. β) produced from the Fowler-Nordheim plot, is strongly coupled to the breakdown problem. A controlled surface study using a high gradient L-band RF gun is being carried out. With a flat cathode, the maximum electric field on the surface reached 103 MV/m. And electric field as high as 565 MV/m on the surface was achieved by a pin-shaped cathode. The field enhancement factor was measured at different surface field during the conditioning process. Initial results of the study are presented in this paper.
Physical review accelerators and beams | 2017
Xiaowei Wu; Toshiyasu Higo; Huaibi Chen; Walter Wuensch; Shuji Matsumoto; Jiahang Shao; Jiaru Shi; T. Abe
arXiv: Accelerator Physics | 2018
Lianmin Zheng; Jiahang Shao; Yingchao Du; J. G. Power; Eric Wisniewski; Wanming Liu; C. Whiteford; M. Conde; Scott Doran; C. Jing; Chuanxiang Tang; W. Gai
Archive | 2018
Jiahang Shao; M. Conde; Chunguang Jing; Darrell Doran; J. G. Power
7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016
Jiahang Shao; Sergey Antipov; Huaibi Chen; Wei Gai; Chunguang Jing; Jiaru Shi; Faya Wang; Xiaowei Wu