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The cryogenic cooling program at the Advanced Photon Source
Author(s) -
C. S. Rogers,
Dennis M. Mills,
Lahsen Assoufid
Publication year - 1994
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/10170236
Subject(s) - monochromator , undulator , liquid nitrogen , optics , advanced photon source , photon , materials science , harmonic , diffraction , crystal (programming language) , bragg's law , water cooling , cryogenics , physics , particle accelerator , radiation , wavelength , beam (structure) , quantum mechanics , computer science , programming language , thermodynamics
This paper describes the experimental and analytical program in cryogenic cooling of high-heat-load optics at the Advanced-Photon Source. A prototype liquid nitrogen pumping system has been procured. This pump provides a variable flow rate of 1 to 10 gpm of pressurized liquid nitrogen and is sized to handle up to 5 kW of optic heat load. Also, a high-vacuum, double-crystal monochromator testing tank has been fabricated. This system will be used to test cryogenic crystals at existing synchrotron sources. A finite element analysis has been performed for a cryogenically cooled Si crystal in the inclined geometry for Undulator A at 100 mA. The inclination angle was 80{degrees}. It was set to diffract from the (111) planes at the first harmonic energy of 4.2 keV. The maximum slope error in the diffraction plane was calculated to be about 1 {mu}rad with a peak temperature of 94 K. An analysis has also been performed for a cryogenically-cooled ``thin`` crystal oriented in the Bragg geometry which accepts 87% of the lst harmonic photons at 3.866 keV. The total absorbed power was 131 W at 100 mA current and the peak temperature was 124 K.

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