Design strategy for the SLS accelerator facility

In the design of SLS a high priority was given to the items Quality, Flexibility and Stability for the primary electron beam and the secondary photon beams.

  1. Quality

    A measure of the quality of a photon beam is its brightness, i.e. the number of photons per six-dimensional phase space volume (photons/s/0.1% BW/mm²/mrad²).
    High brightness has the following advantages:


    To get the desired high brightness the emittance of the circulating electron beam should be as low as possible. This means that the circumference of the storage ring should be, for a given energy, as large as possible and fully packed with bending magnets, quadrupoles and sextupoles. Given the restrictions in budget and the available area a circumference of 288 m was chosen for SLS.

  2. Flexibility

    To serve a variety of users it is desirable to have a wide wavelength spectrum. To get hard X-rays the energy of the storage ring was chosen as 2.4 GeV, with the possibility to go as high as 2.7 GeV.
    For the corresponding undulator a straight section of 4 m is sufficiently long. On the other hand a long straight section of more than 10 m helps to reach low photon energies (ca. 10 eV) with an undulator.

    The SLS lattice was thus conceived with a mix of different insertion sections, namely:
    6 straights à 4 m,   3 straights à 7 m,   3 straights à 11.7 m

    To have full control of the beam size at every undulator and to optimize the so-called dynamic aperture, all 174 quadrupoles and 120 sextupoles are equipped with independent digital power supplies.

  3. Stability




List of Components

The accelerator facility has an impressive number of technical components:

600 magnets
300 vacuum pumps
600 m vacuum tubes
  5 RF cavities
150 beam monitors
50 km power cables
500 km signal cables

The total power consumption of the SLS facility is about 2.5 MW.

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