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A.A. Bogdashov

Other affiliations: University of Stuttgart
Bio: A.A. Bogdashov is an academic researcher from Russian Academy of Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gyrotron & Microwave. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 33 publications receiving 597 citations. Previous affiliations of A.A. Bogdashov include University of Stuttgart.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the results of experimental investigation of two Ka-band gyrotron traveling-wave tube (gyro-TWT) amplifiers with helically corrugated waveguides are presented.
Abstract: The results of experimental investigation of two Ka-band gyrotron traveling-wave tube (gyro-TWT) amplifiers with helically corrugated waveguides are presented. The first tube produces pulsed output power of 130-160 kW within the frequency range of 33.1-35.5 GHz and is capable of operating with a 10% duty factor. Reliability of its major components in the high average power operation regime (about 10 kW) was proven in a continuous-wave (CW) experiment. The second gyro-TWT amplifier delivered CW power of up to 7.7 kW with -3-dB bandwidth of 2.6 GHz and -1-dB bandwidth of 2.1 GHz. Effective implementation of single-stage depressed collectors (to the best of our knowledge, for the first time for gyro-TWTs) enabled the electron efficiencies as high as 36% for the pulsed tube and 33% for the CW tube to be achieved at operation at the second cyclotron harmonic.

104 citations

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TL;DR: In this article, a new approach for the design of a quasi-optical gyrotron mode converter is proposed based on the synthesis of quasioptical mirrors using diffraction (Helmholtz-Kirchhoff) integrals.
Abstract: A new approach for the design of a quasi-optical gyrotron mode converter is proposed. It is based on the synthesis of quasi-optical mirrors using diffraction (Helmholtz-Kirchhoff) integrals. First application of such a method we already described in [1, 2]. Now a more powerful technic is used to provide optimal distributions of the wave beam field. It is shown that by means of specially shaped mirrors parameters of the main converter are enhanced strongly. In this paper we review the search for the optimal scheme of the converter, present and compare results of calculations and measurements of the gyrotron wave beam.

77 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the first continuous wave gyrotron backward-wave oscillator with a helically rippled operating waveguide has been experimentally studied and a cyclotron harmonic with a maximum power of 7 kW and an efficiency of 15% at a frequency of 24.7 GHz was achieved.
Abstract: Operation of a continuous wave gyrotron backward-wave oscillator (gyro-BWO) with a helically rippled operating waveguide has been experimentally studied. The gyro-BWO exploits a dc oil-cooled magnet with magnetic field up to 0.5 T and utilizes a weakly relativistic (20 keV) electron beam produced by a magnetron injection gun. Stable generation at the second cyclotron harmonic with a maximum power of 7 kW and an efficiency of 15% at a frequency of 24.7 GHz was achieved. Smooth oscillation frequency tuning by varying the magnetic field was measured to be as wide as 5% at the half-power level. The first gyro-BWO operation with a single-stage energy recovery system was realized. The use of a depressed collector provided an efficiency increase up to 23% and an opportunity for reduction of the main power supply voltage down to 10 kV.

61 citations

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TL;DR: Based on the Debye asymptotic for Bessel functions, an analytical theory of high-efficiency converters of higher-order waveguide modes into eigenwaves of open mirror transmission lines was developed in this paper.
Abstract: Based on the Debye asymptotic for Bessel functions, we develop an analytical theory of high-efficiency converters of higher-order waveguide modes into eigenwaves of open mirror transmission lines. Simple analytical formulas for the parameters of the basic types of mirror lines are derived. Direct relationship between the nonequidistance of mode wavenumbers, the diffraction lengths of the Brillouin wave beams, and the lengths of converters for oversized waveguides is shown. The results of numerical calculations for some converters are presented for comparison.

57 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a review summarizes recent experimental results in the field of THz gyrotrons developed for various applications, and a powerful pulsed 0.67-THz/200-kW gyrotron is under development for remote detection of ionization sources.
Abstract: The review summarizes recent experimental results in the field of THz gyrotrons developed for various applications. A CW gyrotron with the operation frequency of 0.26 THz has been successfully used for DNP spectroscopy A pulsed high-harmonic Large Orbit Gyrotron (LOG) with the frequency of 0.55 THz and kW level of output power has been used for THz breakdown and obtaining dense plasma in gases. A powerful pulsed 0.67 THz/200 kW gyrotron is under development for remote detection of ionization sources.

46 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present state-of-the-art passive high-power microwave components for applications in microwave systems for RF plasma generation and heating, plasma diagnostics, plasma and microwave materials processing, spectroscopy, communication, radar ranging and imaging, and for drivers of next generation high-field-gradient electron-positron linear colliders.
Abstract: This review discusses the present state-of-the-art of passive high-power microwave components for applications in microwave systems for RF plasma generation and heating, plasma diagnostics, plasma and microwave materials processing, spectroscopy, communication, radar ranging and imaging, and for drivers of next generation high-field-gradient electron-positron linear colliders. The paper reports on high-power components for overmoded high-power transmission systems such as smooth-wall waveguides, HE/sub 11/ hybrid mode waveguides and quasi-optical TEM/sub 00/ beam waveguides. These include various types of mode converters, polarizers, cross-section tapers, bends, mode selective filters, pulse compressors, DC-breaks, directional couplers, beam combiners and dividers, vacuum windows, and instruments for mode analysis. Problems of ohmic attenuation and unwanted conversion to parasitic modes are discussed in detail and rules for alignment requirements are given. In the case of waveguide transmission, this review mainly concentrates on circular waveguide components but also deals with rectangular waveguide.

281 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the development of high-power gyrotron oscillators for long-pulse or CW operation and pulsed gyrotrons for many applications can be found in this article.
Abstract: This paper presents a review of the experimental achievements related to the development of high-power gyrotron oscillators for long-pulse or CW operation and pulsed gyrotrons for many applications. In addition, this work gives a short overview on the present development status of frequency step-tunable and multi-frequency gyrotrons, coaxial-cavity multi-megawatt gyrotrons, gyrotrons for technological and spectroscopy applications, relativistic gyrotrons, large orbit gyrotrons (LOGs), quasi-optical gyrotrons, fast- and slow-wave cyclotron autoresonance masers (CARMs), gyroklystrons, gyro-TWT amplifiers, gyrotwystron amplifiers, gyro-BWOs, gyro-harmonic converters, gyro-peniotrons, magnicons, free electron masers (FEMs), and dielectric vacuum windows for such high-power mm-wave sources. Gyrotron oscillators (gyromonotrons) are mainly used as high-power millimeter wave sources for electron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH), electron cyclotron current drive (ECCD), stability control, and diagnostics of magnetically confined plasmas for clean generation of energy by controlled thermonuclear fusion. The maximum pulse length of commercially available 140 GHz, megawatt-class gyrotrons employing synthetic diamond output windows is 30 min (CPI and European KIT-SPC-THALES collaboration). The world record parameters of the European tube are as follows: 0.92 MW output power at 30-min pulse duration, 97.5% Gaussian mode purity, and 44% efficiency, employing a single-stage depressed collector (SDC) for energy recovery. A maximum output power of 1.5 MW in 4.0-s pulses at 45% efficiency was generated with the QST-TOSHIBA (now CANON) 110-GHz gyrotron. The Japan 170-GHz ITER gyrotron achieved 1 MW, 800 s at 55% efficiency and holds the energy world record of 2.88 GJ (0.8 MW, 60 min) and the efficiency record of 57% for tubes with an output power of more than 0.5 MW. The Russian 170-GHz ITER gyrotron obtained 0.99 (1.2) MW with a pulse duration of 1000 (100) s and 53% efficiency. The prototype tube of the European 2-MW, 170-GHz coaxial-cavity gyrotron achieved in short pulses the record power of 2.2 MW at 48% efficiency and 96% Gaussian mode purity. Gyrotrons with pulsed magnet for various short-pulse applications deliver Pout = 210 kW with τ = 20 μs at frequencies up to 670 GHz (η ≅ 20%), Pout = 5.3 kW at 1 THz (η = 6.1%), and Pout = 0.5 kW at 1.3 THz (η = 0.6%). Gyrotron oscillators have also been successfully used in materials processing. Such technological applications require tubes with the following parameters: f > 24 GHz, Pout = 4–50 kW, CW, η > 30%. The CW powers produced by gyroklystrons and FEMs are 10 kW (94 GHz) and 36 W (15 GHz), respectively. The IR FEL at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in the USA obtained a record average power of 14.2 kW at a wavelength of 1.6 μm. The THz FEL (NOVEL) at the Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics in Russia achieved a maximum average power of 0.5 kW at wavelengths 50–240 μm (6.00–1.25 THz).

279 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the development and the present state-of-the-art of gyrotrons for controlled thermonuclear fusion plasma applications can be found in this paper, where the first gyrotron was invented, designed and tested in Gorky, USSR (now Nizhny Novgorod, Russia), in 1964.
Abstract: Gyrotrons form a specific group of devices in the class of fast-wave vacuum electronic sources of coherent electromagnetic wave radiation known as electron cyclotron masers (ECMs) or cyclotron resonance masers (CRMs). The operation of CRMs is based on the cyclotron maser instability which originates from the relativistic dependence of the electron cyclotron frequency on the electron energy. This relativistic effect can be pronounced even at low voltages when the electron kinetic energy is small in comparison with the rest energy. The free energy for generation of electromagnetic (EM) waves is the energy of electron gyration in an external magnetic field. As in any fast-wave device, the EM field in a gyrotron interaction space is not localized near a circuit wall (like in slow-wave devices), but can occupy large volumes. Due to possibilities of using various methods of mode selection (electrodynamical and electronic ones), gyrotrons can operate in very high order modes. Since the use of large, oversized cavities and waveguides reduces the role of ohmic wall losses and breakdown limitations, gyrotrons are capable of producing very high power radiation at millimeter and submillimeter wavelengths. The present review is restricted primarily by the description of the development and the present state-of-the-art of gyrotrons for controlled thermonuclear fusion plasma applications. The first gyrotron was invented, designed and tested in Gorky, USSR (now Nizhny Novgorod, Russia), in 1964.

177 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The design, operation, and characterization of a continuous-wave (CW) tunable second-harmonic 460-GHz gyrotron are reported, intended to be used as a submillimeter-wave source for 700-MHz nuclear magnetic resonance experiments with sensitivity enhanced by dynamic nuclear polarization.
Abstract: The design, operation, and characterization of a continuous-wave (CW) tunable second-harmonic 460-GHz gyrotron are reported. The gyrotron is intended to be used as a submillimeter-wave source for 700-MHz nuclear magnetic resonance experiments with sensitivity enhanced by dynamic nuclear polarization. The gyrotron operates in the whispering-gallery mode TE11, 2 and has generated 16 W of output power with a 13-kV 100-mA electron beam. The start oscillation current measured over a range of magnetic field values is in good agreement with theoretical start currents obtained from linear theory for successive high-order axial modes TE11, 2,q. The minimum start current is 27 mA. Power and frequency tuning measurements as a function of the electron cyclotron frequency have also been carried out. A smooth frequency tuning range of 1 GHz was obtained for the operating second-harmonic mode either by magnetic field tuning or beam voltage tuning. Long-term CW operation was evaluated during an uninterrupted period of 48 h, where the gyrotron output power and frequency were kept stable to within ±0.7% and ± 6 ppm, respectively, by a computerized control system. Proper operation of an internal quasi-optical mode converter implemented to transform the operating whispering-gallery mode to a Gaussian-like beam was also verified. Based on the images of the gyrotron output beam taken with a pyroelectric camera, the Gaussian-like mode content of the output beam was computed to be 92% with an ellipticity of 12%.

149 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A 670 GHz gyrotron with record power and efficiency has been developed in joint experiments of the Institute of Applied Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences (Nizhny Novgord, Russia), and the University of Maryland (USA) teams as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: A 670 GHz gyrotron with record power and efficiency has been developed in joint experiments of the Institute of Applied Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences (Nizhny Novgord, Russia), and the University of Maryland (USA) teams. The magnetic field of 27–28 T required for operation at the 670 GHz at the fundamental cyclotron resonance is produced by a pulsed solenoid. The pulse duration of the magnetic field is several milliseconds. A gyrotron is driven by a 70 kV, 15 A electron beam, so the beam power is on the order of 1 MW in 10–20 ms pulses. The ratio of the orbital to axial electron velocity components is in the range of 1.2–1.3. The gyrotron is designed to operate in the TE31,8-mode. Operation in a so high-order mode results in relatively low ohmic losses (less than 10% of the radiated power). Achieved power of the outgoing radiation (210 kW) and corresponding efficiency (about 20%) represent record numbers for high-power sources of sub-THz radiation.

141 citations