Author: Ikegami, M.
Paper Title Page
MOIAA01 FRIB Transition to User Operations, Power Ramp Up, and Upgrade Perspectives 1
 
  • J. Wei, H. Ao, B. Arend, S. Beher, G. Bollen, N.K. Bultman, F. Casagrande, W. Chang, Y. Choi, S. Cogan, C. Compton, M. Cortesi, J.C. Curtin, K.D. Davidson, X.J. Du, K. Elliott, B. Ewert, A. Facco, A. Fila, K. Fukushima, V. Ganni, A. Ganshyn, T.N. Ginter, T. Glasmacher, J.-W. Guo, Y. Hao, W. Hartung, N.M. Hasan, M. Hausmann, K. Holland, H.-C. Hseuh, M. Ikegami, D.D. Jager, S. Jones, N. Joseph, T. Kanemura, S.H. Kim, C. Knowles, T. Konomi, B.R. Kortum, E. Kwan, T. Lange, M. Larmann, T.L. Larter, K. Laturkar, R.E. Laxdal, J. LeTourneau, Z. Li, S.M. Lidia, G. Machicoane, C. Magsig, P.E. Manwiller, F. Marti, T. Maruta, E.S. Metzgar, S.J. Miller, Y. Momozaki, D.G. Morris, M. Mugerian, I.N. Nesterenko, C. Nguyen, P.N. Ostroumov, M.S. Patil, A.S. Plastun, L. Popielarski, M. Portillo, J. Priller, X. Rao, M.A. Reaume, K. Saito, B.M. Sherrill, M.K. Smith, J. Song, M. Steiner, A. Stolz, O. Tarasov, B.P. Tousignant, R. Walker, X. Wang, J.D. Wenstrom, G. West, K. Witgen, M. Wright, T. Xu, Y. Yamazaki, T. Zhang, Q. Zhao, S. Zhao
    FRIB, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
  • K. Hosoyama
    KEK, Ibaraki, Japan
  • P. Hurh
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, USA
  • M.P. Kelly, Y. Momozaki
    ANL, Lemont, Illinois, USA
  • R.E. Laxdal
    TRIUMF, Vancouver, Canada
  • S.O. Prestemon
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
  • M. Wiseman
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE-SC0000661.
After pro­ject com­ple­tion on scope, on cost, and ahead of sched­ule, the Fa­cil­ity for Rare Iso­tope Beams began op­er­a­tions for sci­en­tific users in May of 2022. Dur­ing the first 12 months of user op­er­a­tions, the FRIB ac­cel­er­a­tor com­plex de­liv­ered 5250 beam hours, in­clud­ing 1528 hours to nine sci­ence ex­per­i­ments con­ducted with pri­mary beams of 36Ar, 48Ca, 70Zn, 82Se, 124Xe, and 198Pt at beam en­er­gies >200 MeV/u; 2724 hours for beam de­vel­op­ments, stud­ies, and tun­ing; and 998 hours to in­dus­trial users and non-sci­en­tific pro­grams using the FRIB Sin­gle Event Ef­fect (FSEE) beam line. The ramp-up to a beam power of 400 kW is planned over a six-year pe­riod; 1 kW was de­liv­ered for ini­tial user runs from in 2022, and 5 kW was de­liv­ered as of Feb­ru­ary 2023. Up­grade plans in­clude dou­bling the pri­mary-beam en­ergy to 400 MeV/nu­cleon for en­hanced dis­cov­ery po­ten­tial (¿FRIB 400¿). This talk re­ports on FRIB sta­tus and progress since SR­F2021, em­pha­siz­ing lessons learned dur­ing the tran­si­tion from beam com­mis­sion­ing to ma­chine op­er­a­tions, chal­lenges and res­o­lu­tions for the power ramp-up, progress with ac­cel­er­a­tor im­prove­ments, and R&D for the en­ergy up­grade.
 
slides icon Slides MOIAA01 [7.037 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-SRF2023-MOIAA01  
About • Received ※ 20 June 2023 — Revised ※ 26 June 2023 — Accepted ※ 03 July 2023 — Issue date ※ 19 July 2023
Cite • reference for this paper using ※ BibTeX, ※ LaTeX, ※ Text/Word, ※ RIS, ※ EndNote (xml)