[SLAC] [SLAC Pubs and Reports]

SLAC-PUB-8212
Secondary Electron Emission Yields From PEP-II Accelerator Materials

Abstract

The PEP-II B-Factory at SLAC operates with aluminum alloy and copper vacuum chambers, having design positron and electron beam currents of 2 and 1 A, respectively. Titanium nitride coating of the aluminum vacuum chamber in the arcs of the positron ring is needed in order to reduce undesirable electron-cloud effects. The total secondary electron emission yield of TiN-coated aluminum alloy has been measured after samples of beam chamber material were exposed to air and again after electron-beam bombardment, as a function of incident electron beam angle and energy. The results may be used to simulate and better understand electron-cloud effects under actual operating conditions. We also present yield measurements for other accelerator materials because new surface effects are expected to arise as beam currents increase. Copper, in particular, is growing in popularity for its good thermal conductivity and self-radiation-shielding properties. The effect of electron bombardment, "conditioning", on the yield of TiN and copper is shown.

Full Text

PDF

Compressed PostScript

More Information

Full bibliographic data for this document, including its complete author list, is (or soon will be) available from SLAC's SPIRES-HEP Database.

Please report problems with this file to posting@slac.stanford.edu. The SLAC preprint inventory is provided by the SLAC Technical Publications Department.
Page generated 04 Apr 2001 @ 15:06 PDT by htmlme.pl