Development of diamond-based diagnostics for next-generation XFELs

15 Mar 2023, 12:15
20m
Bldg 53 / Room 1320 - Panofsky Auditorium (SLAC)

Bldg 53 / Room 1320 - Panofsky Auditorium

SLAC

2575 Sand Hill Rd Menlo Park, CA USA
Oral Imaging Imaging

Speaker

Bruce Schumm (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics and the University of California, Santa Cruz (US))

Description

FELs deliver rapid pulses on the femtosecond scale, and high peak intensities that fluctuate strongly on a pulse-to-pulse basis. The fast drift velocity and high radiation tolerance properties of chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamonds make these crystals a good candidate material for developing a high frame rate pass-through diagnostic for the next generation of XFELs. We report on two diamond based diagnostic systems being developed by a collaboration of a UC campuses and National Laboratories supported by the University of California and the SLAC National Laboratory.

For the first of these diagnostic systems, we have developed a new approach to the readout of diamond diagnostic sensors designed to facilitate operation as a passthrough detection system for high frame-rate XFEL diagnostics. Making use of the X-ray Pump Probe (XPP) beam at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), the performance of this new diamond sensor system has been characterized and compared to that of a commercially available system. Limits in the magnitude and speed of signal charge collection are explored as a function of the generated electron-hole plasma density and compared to results from a TCAD simulation.

A leading proposal for improving the efficiency of producing longitudinally coherent FEL pulses is the cavity-based X-ray free electron laser (CBFEL). In this configuration, the FEL pulses are recirculated within an X-ray cavity in such a way that the fresh electron bunches interact with the FEL pulses stored in the cavity over multiple passes. This creates a need for diagnostics that can measure the intensity and centroid of the X-ray beam on every pass around the recirculatory path. For the second of these diagnostic systems, we have created a four-channel, position-sensitive pass-through diagnostic system that can measure the intensity and centroid of the circulating beam with a repetition rate in excess of 20 MHz. The diagnostic makes use of a planar diamond sensor thinned to 43 µm to allow for minimal absorption and wave-front distortion of the circulating beam. We also present results on the response and position sensitivity of the diagnostic, again measured using the LCLS XPP beam.

Primary author

Bruce Schumm (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics and the University of California, Santa Cruz (US))

Co-authors

Dr Bryce Jacobsen (SLAC National Laboratory) Dr C. Thomas Harris (Sandia National Laboratory) Dr Carl Grace (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) Prof. David Stuart (University of California, Santa Barbara) Dr Diling Zhu (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory) Dr Dongsung Kim (Los Alamos National Laboratory) Ms Emma Potter (Physics Department, UC Santa Cruz, and the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Mr Eric Gonzalez (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics and the University of California, Santa Cruz (US)) Prof. Eric Prebys (University of California, Davis) Mr Eric Ryan (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Mr Forest Martinez-McKinney (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Ms Isleydys Torrecilla (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory) Dr James MacArthur (SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory) Dr Jennifer Bohon (Los Alamos National Laboratory) Dr John Smedley (Los Alamos National Laboratory) Mr Max Wilder (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Dr Michal Tarka (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Dr Mohammad Nizam (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics ) Ms Nora Norvell (Department of Physics, UC Santa Cruz, and the Santa Cruz Institue for Particle Physics) Mr Rene Padilla (Physics Department, UC Santa Cruz, and the Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Mr Serguei Kachiguine (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Dr Simone Mazza (Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics) Dr Tarun Prakash (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)

Presentation materials