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Compact Linear Accelerator for Research and Applications

Coordinates: 41°43′00″N 87°59′04″W / 41.716645°N 87.98440°W / 41.716645; -87.98440
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Compact Linear Accelerator for Research Applications (CLARA)
General properties
Accelerator typeLinear accelerator
Beam typeElectrons
Beam properties
Maximum energy250 MeV
Maximum currentµA
Physical properties
LocationCheshire, United Kingdom
Coordinates41°43′00″N 87°59′04″W / 41.716645°N 87.98440°W / 41.716645; -87.98440
InstitutionDaresbury Laboratory, [[]]
Dates of operation2018 - present

Compact Linear Accelerator for Research Applications (CLARA) is a scientific user facility at Daresbury Laboratory. It is an electron linear accelerator (linac) currently under construction in the Electron Hall.

CLARA is made up of three phases; Phase 1 is operational and has achieved energies of 50 MeV with bunch charges >250 pC. Phase 2 is being constructed off-line and consists of three linacs delivering a total energy of up to 250 MeV, 250 pC beam charge at 100 Hz repetition rate. Phase 2 also consists of the FEBE (Full Energy Beam Exploitation) arc, a beamline which looks at plasma-wakefield acceleration, boosting the beam to energies of around 2 GeV for high energy experimentation. Phase 3 is future expansion for X-FEL construction. This 100 nm X-FEL is linked to the UK XFEL project.

History

After beginning its decommission process in 2008, the Synchrotron Radiation Source (SRS) left space for construction of a new accelerator in the Electron Hall and Outer Hall. The booster ring bunker was taken down and replaced by a small E-beam facility and the linac bunker was repurposed into a linac test facility (LTF).

Several SRS end stations and beamlines were previously situated in the Electron Hall and in 2015, it was announced that a new linear accelerator, CLARA, was to fill that space.

In 2016 construction began, with the gun end situated where the SRS booster-to-storage transfer line occupied, for the rest of the accelerator to span the length of the hall. Phase 1 was completed (when?) and provided, along with the Versatile Electron Linear Accelerator (VELA), high energy electron beams for scientific research. CLARA's first beam was achieved on (when?).

Properties

Property info.

Research

Research information.

Experiments

References