SUBCRITICAL-VOLTAGE MAGNETRON RF POWER SOURCE
20170250651 · 2017-08-31
Assignee
Inventors
- Grigory M. Kazakevich (North Aurora, IL, US)
- Michael L. Neubauer (San Francisco, CA, US)
- Valeri A. Lebedev (Wheaton, IL, US)
- Vyacheslav P. Yakovlev (Batavia, IL)
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A system and method of operating a magnetron power source can achieve a broad range of output power control by operating a magnetron with its cathode voltage lower than that needed for free running oscillations (e.g., below the Kapitsa critical voltage or equivalently below the Hartree voltage) A sufficiently strong injection-locking signal enables the output power to be coherently generated and to be controlled over a broad power range by small changes in the cathode voltage. In one embodiment, the present system and method is used for a practical, single, frequency-locked 2-magnetron system design.
Claims
1-4. (canceled)
5. A system for powering an accelerating cavity, comprising: a first power source configured to receive an input injection-locking signal and produce an injection-locked first output signal using the input injection-locking signal; a second power source coupled to the first power source and configured to receive the injection-locked first output signal and produce a second output signal, the second power source including a high-power magnetron receiving a cathode voltage, the cathode voltage controlling a power of the second output signal; and a voltage supply system coupled to the second power source and configured to control the power of the second output signal by providing a subcritical feeding voltage as the cathode voltage, the subcritical voltage below a critical voltage needed for self-excitation of the high-power magnetron.
6. The system of claim 5, wherein the voltage supply system comprises: a probe configured to measure an accelerating voltage signal in the accelerating cavity; and a power feedback loop configured to control the power of the second output signal using the measured accelerating voltage signal.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the voltage supply system comprises: a low-power high-voltage (HV) power supply; a main HV power supply coupled to the low-power HV power supply and configured to be biased by the low-power HV power supply; and a controller configured to control the low-power HV power supply using the measured accelerating voltage signal.
8. The system of claim 6, wherein the high-power magnetron is configured to injection-lock a frequency of the high-power magnetron using the received injection-locked first output signal.
9. The system of claim 5, wherein the first power source comprises a solid state amplifier.
10. The system of claim 5, wherein the first power source comprises a low-power magnetron configured to be driven and phase-locked by the input injection-locking signal.
11. The system of claim 10, further comprising a probe configured to measure an accelerating voltage signal in the accelerating cavity, and wherein the low-power magnetron is configured to be phase-locked by phase modulation of the input injection-locking signal using a phase feedback loop comparing a phase of the input injection-locking signal with a phase of the measured accelerating voltage signal.
12. The system of claim 11, further comprising a phase controller configured to frequency-lock the low-power magnetron.
13. The system of claim 11, wherein the voltage supply system comprises a power feedback loop configured to control the power of the second output signal using the measured accelerating voltage signal.
14. The system of claim 13, wherein the voltage supply system comprises: a low-power high-voltage (HV) power supply; a main HV power supply coupled to the low-power HV power supply and configured to be biased by the low-power HV power supply; and a controller configured to control the low-power HV power supply using the measured accelerating voltage.
15. The system of claim 10, wherein the low-power magnetron and the high-power magnetron are configured to operate in a continuous wave (CW) mode.
16. The system of claim 10, wherein the low-power magnetron and the high-power magnetron are configured to operate in a pulsed mode.
17. A method for operating a magnetron power source, comprising: driving a first power source using an input injection-locking signal; producing an injection-locked first output signal by processing the input injection-locking signal using the first power source; driving a second power source using the injection-locked first output signal, the second power source including a high-power magnetron receiving a cathode voltage; producing a second output signal using the high-power magnetron, the second output signal having a power being a function of the cathode voltage; and providing a subcritical feeding voltage as the cathode voltage, the subcritical voltage below a critical voltage needed for self-excitation of the high-power magnetron.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein driving the first power source using the input injection-locking signal comprises: driving a low-power magnetron using the input injection-locking signal; and phase-locking the low-power magnetron using the input injection-locking signal.
19. The method of claim 17, further comprising powering an accelerating cavity using the second output signal.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein providing the second output signal comprises: measuring an accelerating voltage in the accelerating cavity; and controlling the power of the second output signal using the measured accelerating voltage signal.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein controlling the power of the second output signal comprises: biasing main high-voltage (HV) power supply using a low-power HV power supply; and controlling the low-power HV power supply using the measured accelerating voltage.
22. The method of claim 21, further comprising injection-locking a frequency of the high-power magnetron using the received injection-locked first output signal.
23. The method of claim 22, wherein driving the first power source using the input injection-locking signal comprises: driving a low-power magnetron using the input injection-locking signal; and phase-locking the low-power magnetron using the input injection-locking signal.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein phase-locking the low-power magnetron using the input injection-locking signal comprises phase modulating the input injection-locking signal using a phase feedback loop comparing a phase of the input injection-locking signal with a phase of the measured accelerating voltage signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013]
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[0015] The heavy lines with arrows indicate the direction of information or power flow.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0020] The embodiment of a high-power RF source powering a superconducting RF cavity is based on a single, frequency-locked 2-cascade magnetron system. It is controlled in phase over a wide band by a phase-modulated injection-locking signal and controlled in power in the range up to 10 dB by a HV power supply within a fast feedback loop comparing the amplitude of the accelerating voltage in the cavity measured by an RF probe with the required accelerating voltage. The cost-effective 2-cascade magnetron system is shown schematically in
[0021] RF probe 11 within a phase feedback loop. This provides the required injection-locking signal for the wideband phase control of the second, high-power magnetron. The phase control is realized by phase modulation of the input injection-locking signal, as it was demonstrated in Ref. [1]. The high-power magnetron 3 is driven by a sufficient injection-locking signal to operate stably with a feeding voltage less than the critical voltage in free run [2]. This allows control of the power via the LLRF 10 of the high-power magnetron over an extended range by varying the current—controlled HV power supply 8 that biases the main HV supply 9 within the feedback loop. Thus one can achieve the quite fast power control with highest efficiency in the range of 10 dB avoiding redistribution of the RF power into a dummy load unlike Refs. [1,3]; the only purpose for the loads 4 in this erribodi e is to protect circuitry from unintended reflected signals.
[0022] Proof-of-Principle of the Invention
[0023] Proof-of-Principle of the invented technique was demonstrated with 2.45 GHz, 1 kW magnetrons operating in pulsed and CW modes, [2].
[0024] The experiments in CW mode demonstrated the capability of power control over the range of 10 dB, with the efficiency remaining quite high over all the range of power control, given sufficient power of the locking signal, as seen in
[0025] Being injection locked, the magnetron provides precise frequency stability of the output signal to control of the output power over a 10 dB range as shown in
[0026] The 2.45 GHz transmitter model demonstrates capability for dynamic power control that is necessary for superconducting accelerators as shown in
[0027] Normally, the bandwidth of the invented power control technique is limited by the bandwidth of magnetron current regulation. Presently, one estimates this bandwidth up to 10 kHz without compromise of the transmitter efficiency. Due to the bandwidth of the phase control in the MHz range, [1], the phase pushing arising from the current control of the high-power magnetron can be compensated to a level of about −60 dB or better. It is suitable for various superconducting accelerators.
[0028] The realization of the invented technique of power control of frequency-locked cascaded magnetron transmitters is very promising for high-power RF sources for superconducting and normal-conducting high-power accelerators.
[0029] Model of Operation
[0030] Detailed consideration of the kinetic simplified model describing the radial and azimuthal drift of the charge in a conventional magnetron driven by a resonant (injection-locking) signal is presented in Ref. [4]. Below we present a simple estimate of the power control range vs. the power of the locking signal.
[0031] As it follows from performance charts of typical magnetrons, [6], the minimum magnetron power, P.sub.min, is usually ˜⅓ of the nominal power, P.sub.nom, and corresponds to the threshold voltage of self-excitation. For commercial magnetrons, as it is noted in Ref. [7], the energy of the RE field in the interaction space is approximately 3 times less than the energy stored in the magnetron RE system including the interaction space and cavities; half of the energy in the interaction space is associated with the RE field in the synchronous wave. Thus, an injection of the resonant driving wave with power P.sub.Lock in the magnetron RF system, as it follows from the law of energy conservation increases the energy stored in the RF system. From the point of view of the magnetron start up, it is equivalent to the decrease of the critical magnetron voltage, U.sub.C, by
ΔU˜U.sub.C.Math.(1−(P.sub.S min/(P.sub.S min+P.sub.D/6)).sup.1/2). (2)
[0032] With the magnetron dynamic impedance Z.sub.D, the minimum current I.sub.minD can be estimated to be:
I.sub.minD˜I.sub.min−ΔU/Z.sub.0, (3)
where I.sub.min minimum current in free run. The power range, R.sub.D, allowable for regulation in the driven
[0033] magnetron one estimates at the nominal magnetron current, I.sub.nom, as:
R.sub.D=P.sub.nom/P.sub.minD≈(I.sub.nom/I.sub.minD). (4)
[0034] For the 1 kW magnetron model considered in Ref. [4] at P.sub.Lock˜−10 dB of the nominal power one obtains: R.sub.D˜10 dB. As it is shown in
[0035] Many people familiar with the operation of magnetron power sources understand their operation based on V-I plots.
[0036] Application to Superconducting RF Particle Accelerators
[0037] Modern superconducting accelerators require highly efficient megawatt-class RF sources with dynamic phase and power control to compensate changes of the accelerating field in Superconducting RF (SRF) cavities due to microphonics, Lorenz force detuning. etc. That is, the small changes in cavity dimensions due to sonic vibrations and to forces from normal operation induce time varying frequency variations that, due to the high quality factor of superconducting cavities (typical loaded quality factors are in the range 10.sup.7-10.sup.8) can destroy the beam quality. This can cause beam losses that can destroy accelerator components or make the beam unusable for many applications. It is known that these effects can be mitigated if the power sources feeding the cavities can react to the changes in the cavities by controlling their phase and power with the proper low level RF system.
[0038] Magnetron power sources have long been considered inappropriate for many high-power SRF applications because they are essentially oscillators that operate over a small range of output power that is insufficient and too slow to control microphonics. Some recent studies that use vector power control to provide power control with sufficient bandwidth look promising, but they are effectively diverting some of the power of the magnetrons into dummy loads that heat water, representing an intrinsic inefficiency of these methods.
[0039] Unlike these vector power control techniques that manage the accelerating voltage in the SRF cavity by redistribution of magnetron power between the cavity and a dummy load (the magnetron in this method always operates at nominal power), our innovative technique directly controls the output power of the magnetron, without a dummy load, to achieve the highest possible operating efficiency. This is realized by a wide range of power control made possible by operating with subcritical cathode voltage, i.e. below the level needed for self-excitation of the tube, where the injection--locking signal creates the conditions to excite the magnetron and is thereby extremely effective to control its phase, frequency, and output power. This innovative technique has been demonstrated in experiments that show a wide range of power control (up to 10 dB) with low phase noise and precise frequency stability.
[0040] Other Applications
[0041] Applications include marine radar, microwave assisted sintering of ceramics and other materials, and microwave assisted processes in the chemical industry. A likely profitable usage is RF transmitters for TV and high frequency radio, where the efficiency and cost of magnetrons are significantly better than for other choices.
[0042] Previous Patent References
[0043] Previous patent references related to magnetron cathode voltage operation below or near the critical or Hartree voltage are listed below. We were unable to find any previous patents where the magnetron operation was significantly below the critical voltage and we found none that used the power from the injection-locking signal to enable operation with the cathode below the critical value.
REFERENCES CITED
[0044] U.S. Patent Documents
[0045] U.S. Pat. No. 2,576,108 Amplitude Modulation of Magnetrons
[0046] U.S. Pat. No. 2,620,467 Amplitude Modulation of Magnetrons, RCA
OTHER PATENT DOCUMENTS
[0047] GB541120A Improvements relating to the modulation of magnetron oscillators
[0048] GB2235775A Magnetron RF generation for electron paramagnetic resonance
[0049] OTHER PUBLICATIONS [0050] [1] G. Kazakevich, EIC 2014, TUDF1132_Talk, http:appora.fnal.gov/pls/eic14/agenda.full l [0051] [2] G. Kazakevich, R. P. Johnson, U. Flanagan, F. Marhauser, V. Yakovlev, B. Chase, V. Lebedev, S. Nagaitsev, R. Pasquinelli, N. Solyak, K. Quinn, D. Wolff, V. Pavlov, NIM A 760 (2014) 19-27, [0052] [3] B. Chase, R. Pasquinelli, E. Cullerton, P. Varghese, JINST, 10, P03007, 2015. [0053] [4] G. Kazakevich, V. Lebedev, V. Yakovlev, V. Pavlov, NIM A 839 (2016) 43-51. [0054] [5] G. Kazakevich, R. Johnson, M. Neubauer, V. Lebedev, W. Schappert, V. Yakovlev, TUA2CO03, NAPAC 2016 Conference, Chicago, Ill., USA. [0055] [6] G. B. Collins, from “Microwave Magnetrons”, New York, McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1948. [0056] [7] P. L. Kapitza, HIGH POWER ELECTRONICS, Sov. Phys. Uspekhi, V 5, # 5, 777-826, 1963.