| Literature DB >> 31274430 |
Rafael Abela1, Arturo Alarcon1, Jürgen Alex1, Christopher Arrell1, Vladimir Arsov1, Simona Bettoni1, Markus Bopp1, Christoph Bostedt1, Hans Heinrich Braun1, Marco Calvi1, Tine Celcer1, Paolo Craievich1, Andreas Dax1, Philipp Dijkstal1, Sladana Dordevic1, Eugenio Ferrari1, Uwe Flechsig1, Rolf Follath1, Franziska Frei1, Nazareno Gaiffi1, Zheqiao Geng1, Christopher Gough1, Nicole Hiller1, Stephan Hunziker1, Martin Huppert1, Rasmus Ischebeck1, Haimo Jöhri1, Pavle Juranic1, Roger Kalt1, Maik Kaiser1, Boris Keil1, Christoph Kittel1, René Künzi1, Thomas Lippuner1, Florian Löhl1, Fabio Marcellini1, Goran Marinkovic1, Cigdem Ozkan Loch1, Gian Luca Orlandi1, Bruce Patterson1, Claude Pradervand1, Martin Paraliev1, Marco Pedrozzi1, Eduard Prat1, Predrag Ranitovic2, Sven Reiche1, Colette Rosenberg1, Stephane Sanfilippo1, Thomas Schietinger1, Thomas Schmidt1, Kirsten Schnorr1, Cristian Svetina1, Alexandre Trisorio1, Carlo Vicario1, Didier Voulot1, Ulrich Wagner1, Hans Jakob Wörner2, Adriano Zandonella1, Luc Patthey1, Romain Ganter1.
Abstract
The SwissFEL soft X-ray free-electron laser (FEL) beamline Athos will be ready for user operation in 2021. Its design includes a novel layout of alternating magnetic chicanes and short undulator segments. Together with the APPLE X architecture of undulators, the Athos branch can be operated in different modes producing FEL beams with unique characteristics ranging from attosecond pulse length to high-power modes. Further space has been reserved for upgrades including modulators and an external seeding laser for better timing control. All of these schemes rely on state-of-the-art technologies described in this overview. The optical transport line distributing the FEL beam to the experimental stations was designed with the whole range of beam parameters in mind. Currently two experimental stations, one for condensed matter and quantum materials research and a second one for atomic, molecular and optical physics, chemical sciences and ultrafast single-particle imaging, are being laid out such that they can profit from the unique soft X-ray pulses produced in the Athos branch in an optimal way. open access.Entities:
Keywords: APPLE undulator; FEL; chicane; superradiance
Year: 2019 PMID: 31274430 PMCID: PMC6613127 DOI: 10.1107/S1600577519003928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Synchrotron Radiat ISSN: 0909-0495 Impact factor: 2.616
Figure 1Schematic layout of SwissFEL with the Athos branch in the upper right part.
Figure 2Possible operation modes of Athos, arranged by their required hardware components.
Key parameters for most of the operation modes discussed in this section
Underlying simulations were based on 20 undulator modules available.
| Mode | Pulse energy | No. of photons per pulse at 1 nm | Pulse duration (r.m.s.) | Bandwidth (r.m.s.) | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SASE (200 pC) | >1 mJ | 5 × 1012 | 30 fs | 0.1–0.4% | |
| SASE (10 pC) | >50 µJ (10 pC) | 2.5 × 1011 | 2 fs | 0.1–0.4% | |
| Self-seeding | ∼ 1 mJ | 5 × 1012 | 30 fs | < 10−4 | Above 1 nm, 200 pC only |
| Optical klystron | >1 mJ | 5 × 1012 | 30 fs | 0.1–0.4% | Shorter saturation length |
| HB-SASE | >1 mJ | 5 × 1012 | 30 fs | 0.01–0.13% | Can also be configured for pulse trains |
| High-power short-pulse | ∼300 µJ | 1.5 × 1012 | ∼250 as | 1% FWHM | 200 pC bunch |
| Two colours | 2 × ∼50 µJ | 2 × 2.5 × 1011 | 2 × 2–10 fs | 0.2%; tuning range: factor 5 | Based on 200 pC bunch |
| Large-bandwidth | ∼0.1 mJ | 5 × 1011 | 30 fs | >10% full width | 200 pC only |
| Slicing | 1 µJ (every 3 fs) | 5 × 109 | < 1 fs per pulse | 0.1–0.4% | Single pulse or pulse train; sub-femtosecond locking |
Figure 3Vertical plane beam trajectories between kicker and septum (a) and the same but magnified in the kicker region (b). Coloured rectangles represent the field regions of different magnetic components: quadrupoles (Q), kickers (K), dipoles (D) and septum (S). Arrows show the direction of magnetic deflection.
Main parameters of kickers and septum
| Resonant kickers | |
| Number of devices | 2 |
| Deflection angle | ±0.45 mrad |
| Frequency | 17.85 MHz |
| Peak current | 280 A |
| Peak current stability | <3 p.p.m. r.m.s. |
| Peak field | 6.2 mT |
| Peak field integral | 4.7 mT m |
| Septum | |
| Number of devices | 1 |
| Deflection angle | 35 mrad |
| Current (MMF) | 3700 At |
| Stability | <10 p.p.m. r.m.s. |
| Magnetic field | 480 mT |
| Main field integral | 365 mT m |
| Leakage field integral | <100 µT m |
Figure 4Schematic and photograph of the Lambertson septum.
Figure 5Dechirper vacuum chamber where two parallel corrugation plates (insets) can be moved close to the beam trajectory.
Figure 6The UE38 undulator is about 2.2 m long, 1.4 m wide and 2 m high. The cast iron frame is adjustable with five degrees of freedom thanks to cam-shaft movers. The motor control electronics are mounted directly to the frame. Inset: magnet arrays can move along a 45° plane to vary the gap (K values) and along the z axis to change polarization.
Figure 7Block keeper principle with two magnets per individual flexor and four periods in total.
Figure 8Left: detail of the RF field in the input/output coupler. Middle: complete TDS prototype. Right: basic disc.
Figure 9Concept of the post-undulator diagnostic section.
Figure 10Optical design of the Athos beamlines.
Figure 11Sketch of the experimental areas of the SwissFEL Athos beamlines. The accelerator is to the left of the above area, with X-rays propagating from left to right.
Figure 12Conceptual design of the SwissFEL AMO beamline. The experimental station consists of the following sub-units: a main UHV chamber with electron and ion detection as well as a large-area X-ray imaging detector, and a transient absorption spectrometer. A variety of injectors will deliver cold atomic and molecular targets, liquid jets, as well as nanoparticles and aerosols.
Figure 13Schematic of the Furka experimental station performing ultrafast tr-RIXS, tr-REXS and tr-SXD on quantum materials [RIXS map adapted from Schlappa et al. (2012 ▸)].