Since late March, Sirius has implemented a new operating mode that involves injecting new electrons into the storage accelerator every 3 minutes, guaranteeing that the current remains nearly constant throughout its operations. This results in around 25% more photons emitted per day compared to the previous mode, in which electrons were injected every 8 hours and beam current decayed during this period.
Secure implementation of top-up mode became possible after the development of various accelerator subsystems, such as an interlock system that allows injection while blocking open beamlines, and optimizing the injector system to ensure highly efficient injection.
In this operating mode, the thermal load on the optical elements is practically constant, and as a result the researchers using the facilities at Sirius will have access to a much more stable beamline.
Another advantage of operating in top-up mode is that vertical emittance of the electron beam can be reduced, translating into brighter beams and higher resolution in the experimental stations. In the old mode, vertical emittance was set to a higher value so the beam current would decay more slowly throughout the shift.
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The process of injecting new electrons into the accelerator uses pulsed magnets that can disturb the stability of the beamline for a fraction of the dozens of milliseconds each pulse lasts. Because in top-up mode injection takes place while experiments are being conducted with the beamlines, it is important that it be done as “transparently” as possible.
Today, research to refine the injection process and make it more transparent is underway at most of the world’s synchrotron light sources. Work at Sirius in this area, involving prototypes that are already operating in the accelerators, has shown great potential to reach a high level of transparency.
For these reasons, top-up mode is considered a major landmark at Sirius. According to Liu Lin, Head of the Division of Accelerator Physics, “Constant thermal load is beneficial for the stability of the optical systems in beamlines and for the equipment in the accelerator itself. And the brighter light and higher number of photons emitted per day ensure a better-quality beam for experiments on the beamlines.”
About CNPEM
Sophisticated and effervescent environment for research and development, unique in Brazil and present in few scientific centers in the world, the Brazilian Center for Research in Energy and Materials (CNPEM) is a private non-profit organization, under the supervision of the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation (MCTI). The Center operates four National Laboratories and is the birthplace of the most complex project in Brazilian science – Sirius – one of the most advanced synchrotron light sources in the world. CNPEM brings together highly specialized multi-thematic teams, globally competitive laboratory infrastructures open to the scientific community, strategic lines of investigation, innovative projects in partnership with the productive sector and training of researchers and students. The Center is an environment driven by the search for solutions with impact in the areas of Health, Energy and Renewable Materials, Agro-environment, and Quantum Technologies. As of 2022, with the support of the Ministry of Education (MEC), CNPEM expanded its activities with the opening of the Ilum School of Science. The interdisciplinary higher course in Science, Technology and Innovation adopts innovative proposals with the aim of offering excellent, free, full-time training with immersion in the CNPEM research environment. Through the CNPEM 360 Platform, it is possible to explore, in a virtual and immersive way, the main environments and activities of the Center, visit: https://pages.cnpem.br/cnpem360/.