Superfluid helium cryogenic systems for superconducting RF cavities at KEK

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Abstract

Recent accelerator projects at KEK, such as the Superconducting RF Test Facility (STF) for R&D of the International Linear Collider (ILC) project and the compact Energy Recovery Linac (cERL), employ superconducting RF cavities made of pure niobium, which can generate high gradient acceleration field. Since the operation temperature of these cavities is selected to be 2 K, we have developed two 2 K superfluid helium cryogenic systems for stable operation of superconducting RF cavities for each of STF and cERL. These two 2 K superfluid helium cryogenic systems are identical in principle. Since the operation mode of the cavities is different for STF and cERL, i.e. the pulse mode for STF and the continuous wave mode for cERL, the heat loads from the cavities are quite different. The 2 K superfluid helium cryogenic systems mainly consists of ordinary helium liquefiers/refrigerators, 2 K refrigerator cold boxes, helium gas pumping systems and high-performance transfer lines. The 2 K refrigerators and the high-performance transfer lines are designed by KEK. Some superconducting RF cavity cryomodules have been already connected to the 2 K superfluid helium cryogenic systems for STF and cERL respectively, and cooled down to 2 K successfully.

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Nakai, H., Hara, K., Honma, T., Hosoyama, K., Kojima, Y., Nakanishi, K., … Morita, S. (2014). Superfluid helium cryogenic systems for superconducting RF cavities at KEK. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1573, pp. 1349–1356). American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4860863

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