Author: Russo, L.M.
Paper Title Page
THPDP080 Gateware and Software for ALS-U Instrumentation 1536
 
  • L.M. Russo, A. Amodio, M.J. Chin, W.E. Norum, K.S. Penney, G.J. Portmann, J.M. Weber
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the Director, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.
The Advanced Light Source Upgrade (ALS-U) is a diffraction-limited light source upgrade project under development at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The Instrumentation team is responsible for developing hardware, gateware, embedded software and control system integration for diagnostics projects, including Beam Position Monitor (BPM), Fast Orbit Feedback (FOFB), High Speed Digitizer (HSD), Beam Current Monitor (BCM), as well as Fast Machine Protection System (FMPS) and Timing. This paper describes the gateware and software approach to these projects, its challenges, tests and integration plans for the novel accumulation and storage rings and transfer lines.
 
poster icon Poster THPDP080 [4.586 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2023-THPDP080  
About • Received ※ 04 October 2023 — Revised ※ 27 October 2023 — Accepted ※ 08 December 2023 — Issued ※ 15 December 2023
Cite • reference for this paper using ※ BibTeX, ※ LaTeX, ※ Text/Word, ※ RIS, ※ EndNote (xml)  
 
MO3AO03 Commissioning and Optimization of the SIRIUS Fast Orbit Feedback 123
 
  • D.O. Tavares, M.S. Aguiar, F.H. Cardoso, E.P. Coelho, G.R. Cruz, A.F. Giachero, L. Lin, S.R. Marques, A.C.S. Oliveira, G.S. Ramirez, É.N. Rolim, L.M. Russo, F.H. de Sá
    LNLS, Campinas, Brazil
 
  The Sirius Fast Orbit Feedback System (FOFB) entered operation for users in November 2022. The system design aimed at minimizing the overall feedback loop delay, understood as the main performance bottleneck in typical FOFB systems. Driven by this goal, the loop update rate was chosen as high as possible, real-time processing was entirely done in FPGAs, BPMs and corrector power supplies were tightly integrated to the feedback controllers in MicroTCA crates, a small number of BPMs was included in the feedback loop and a dedicated network engine was used. These choices targeted a disturbance rejection crossover frequency of 1 kHz. To deal with the DC currents that build up in the fast orbit corrector power supplies, a method to transfer the DC control effort to the Slow Orbit Feedback System (SOFB) running in parallel was implemented. This contribution gives a brief overview of the system architecture and modelling, and reports on its commissioning, system identification and feedback loop optimization during its first year of operation.  
slides icon Slides MO3AO03 [78.397 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-ICALEPCS2023-MO3AO03  
About • Received ※ 06 October 2023 — Revised ※ 09 October 2023 — Accepted ※ 14 November 2023 — Issued ※ 03 December 2023
Cite • reference for this paper using ※ BibTeX, ※ LaTeX, ※ Text/Word, ※ RIS, ※ EndNote (xml)