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PHY693/ESE 593

High Power RF Engineering

 

Instructors:

Jayant P. Parekh       jayant.parekh@stonybrook.edu

Wencam Xu                wxu@bnl.gov

Binping Xiao              binping@bnl.gov

Course Overview
The course starts with an essential review of the properties of low and medium power RF waves and components including transmission lines, waveguides and cavities, and then proceeds to highlight their properties and limitations under high power RF conditions. While the use of RF at high power levels is a necessity for many applications, there is a limit to how high the power level can be because of overheating problems. The principal deleterious effects taking place at high power levels are caused by arcing (a high peak power effect) and the ohmic dissipation in the metal walls (a high average power effect). Exceeding the power handling capacity of the RF components can result in expensive repairs. Methods of mitigating or avoiding these expensive repairs are discussed. Important applications of high power rf are discussed in depth. Finally the students are given an extended project on implementing a particle accelerator using the traditional method of placing cylindrical cavities in tandem and using the longitudinal electric field in the TM010 cavity mode to pump RF power into a particle beam and cause the desired acceleration of the charge particles.

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Learning Objectives


Upon completion of the course, students will have

  • refreshed their background and learning of low and medium power RF waves and components;
  • learnt about the important limitations of using RF components at high power levels, and methods of mitigating the deleterious arcing and ohmic dissipation overheating problems which cause expensive repairs;
  • learnt about high-power RF amplifiers and oscillators;
  • learnt about important application of high power RF; and
  • learnt about how high RF particle accelerators are implemented in practice

 


Main Texts and suggested materials

Textbook: None.
Class notes and references will be provided by the instructors and posted on Brightspace. Videos on relevant topics covered in the course will also be posted on Brightspace.

 

Topics:

ESSENTIAL REVIEW OF LOW AND MEDIUM POWER RF:

  • Lorentz force equation, cyclotron motion of charged particles
  • Maxwell Equations, electromagnetic wave equation, uniform plane EM waves in dielectrics and conductors, power flow, skin effect
  • Transmission lines (TLs): wave behavior of voltage and current on a TL arising from the distributed circuit nature of TLs, voltage reflection coefficient Г, VSWR S, Smith Chart, impedance matching techniques. Derivation of time-average power flow in the TEM mode in a coaxial TL, and its dependence on the geometry of the TL and the peak or amplitude value of the electric field. High power handling capability of coaxial TLs and the limitations imposed by arcing or dielectric breakdown taking place when the electric field between conductors of a coaxial TL exceeds a threshold value, and also the propagation loss arising from ohmic dissipation. Derivation of the propagation loss in TEM wave propagating in a coaxial TL in dB/m.
  • Waveguides (WGs): TE and TM modes, dominant modes in rectangular and circular WGs, electric and magnetic field expressions in the dominant modes, derivation of time-average power flow in the TE10 mode in a rectangular WG and sample calculation of the maximum value of this power in the TE10 mode before arcing occurs, derivation of the attenuation in dB/m of the TE10 mode due to Ohmic dissipation
  • RF Cavities: properties of rectangular and circular cavities, resonant frequencies, Q factor, field profiles in cavities, TM010 mode of cylindrical cavity used in accelerators because of the longitudinal rf electric field which imparts the accelerating force to the charged particle beam, equivalent resonant LRC circuit
  • Scattering parameters for multi-port RF components and their use in computing reflection and transmission coefficients and power flow in RF circuits components such as isolators, circulators, directional couplers, phase shifters, the Riblet coupler, the magic tee, etc.
  • EM waves in magnetized ferrites and their use in making nonreciprocal  microwave components


HIGH POWER RF:

High-power RF components (TLs, WGs, cavities, etc.) are dimensionally the same as their low or medium power counterparts.

  • Two main problems exist in using RF components at high RF power levels:
  1. High peak power kills hardware through dielectric breakdown (arcing), and
  2. High average power kills hardware through excessive heating due to ohmic dissipation in the metal walls

Some mitigation of the arcing problem is achieved by placing gaseous or solid dielectrics with higher dielectric constants, thereby raising the threshold electric field above which arcing takes place.

Some mitigation of the excessive heating problem is achieved by using a heat sink implemented using cooling methods.

Exceeding the power handling limitations of RF components can result in expensive repairs.

  • High power RF amplifiers: tetrode amplifiers, solid-state amplifiers, traveling wave tube (TWT) amplifiers (popular in high-power RF transmitters, satellite transponders, radars, etc.)
  • High power RF generators: klystrons, magnetrons, solid-state oscillators

APPLICATIONS OF HIGH POWER RF AND HOW THEY WORK:

  • The ubiquitous microwave oven
  • Broadband jamming
  • Electronic warfare
  • Pulsed radar
  • RF transmitters and receivers
  • Food processing industry
  • Industrial heating and drying applications
  • Plasma generators (used in the production of integrated circuits, solar cells, batteries, fuel cells, flat panel displays, etc.)
  • Particle accelerators

EXTENDED PROJECT ON USING HIGH POWER RF IN PARTICLE ACCERATORS:

  • Cylindrical RF cavities placed in tandem and connected via drift tubes through which a particle beam accelerates
  • TM010 mode of cylindrical cavity used in transferring power into the beam via its longitudinal electric field and thereby accelerating the particles
  •  Students to submit a detailed report on the design of a particle accelerator using  high power longitudinal electric field in the cavities

 

Homework Assignments:

Homework Assignments will be issued once every week. All homework solutions must be submitted on Brightspace by the midnight of the assigned day.


Grades

 

1 Term Exam                         25%

Homework                             25%

Final Exam                              25%

Project                                      25%

 

Examination schedule:

     Term Exam: Wed., Oct. 9, 2024 in class

      Final Exam:  Mon., Dec. 16, 2024 from 5:30 pm to 8 pm