1. Introduction
An idealized Halbach array of permanent magnets, originally described by Klaus Halbach in 1980 [
1,
2] for use in multipole magnets and undulators, consists of regions of permanent magnet with smoothly rotating residual fields. The benefit of this configuration is the establishment of a “strong” and “weak” side to the array, enhancing the magnetic field on the strong side and attenuating it on the weak side. This leads to more efficient use of the available magnetic flux, giving stronger fields than other magnetization configurations. Practical realizations of Halbach arrays consist of discrete magnets, each with a unique, constant magnetization vector, arranged to approximate the idealized case. Halbach arrays have been used extensively in beamline magnets including the construction of permanent magnet wigglers and undulators [
3,
4,
5,
6] and multipole magnets including dipoles [
7] and quadrupoles [
8]. In addition to the pure permanent magnet (PPM) arrays, hybrid arrays consisting of both hard and soft ferromagnetic materials are also used [
9,
10,
11]. The most common practical implementation of these hybrid arrays to the realization of undulators involves magnets with alternating polarities with their magnetization vectors oriented in the longitudinal direction, interspersed with high-saturation soft ferromagnets. Such undulators are capable of achieving gap fields significantly higher than PPM undulators, for reasons that will be discussed below.
There is growing interest in the development and use of short period undulators (or micro-undulators) [
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
16], facilitated by microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) and other modern, nonconventional machining techniques. Decreasing the undulator period length decreases free-electron laser (FEL) or light source length while also producing harder radiation from lower energy electrons, which may be produced by a shorter accelerator. Comb fabrication is one approach for facilitating fabrication of micro-undulators, which has been demonstrated before for simple up–down (
in the terminology in [
1]) style undulators [
14]. However, here we are interested in higher-order,
, Halbach arrays, as they offer superior magnetic field performance. If the minimum feature size of the manufacturing process is at least 4 times smaller than the required period, either
or hybrid arrays can be used. Otherwise, isosceles triangle based arrays can provide the same period length as an
for a given feature size but with improved field strength [
17].
2. Methods
Comb fabrication relies on the cutting of multiple “teeth” out of a single piece of material, all of which will have the same magnetization vector. Thus, this approach gives a straightforward path in both mechanical fabrication and magnetization of the machined combs. These combs are designed in such a way that they may be slotted together to form the complete Halbach array of a single undulator jaw. One additional constraint to the design of these combs is that they must be manufacturable using only through-bulk cutting, as opposed to a depth-controllable process such as milling. This is due to the limited selection of machining processes conducive both to machining rare earth magnets, which are brittle and hard, and capable of operating at such small length scales. Two nonconventional machining processes in particular are well suited to this task, laser machining and wire electrical discharge machining (EDM), and both are through-bulk processes. A total of four geometry types will be considered: up–down (
), isosceles triangle,
, and hybrid arrays. The idealized cross sections of each of these geometries in the two-dimensional limit, as well as example combs for each, are shown in
Figure 1.
The
array is the simplest case and comb fabrication has been previously demonstrated [
14]. An array based on isosceles triangles, with the same volume of magnetic material per period and same minimum feature size, produces integrated fields approximately 20% higher than the
case [
17]. The
case offers a higher field than either of these but requires four feature lengths per period, making it unsuitable for undulators with especially short periods. An expression in [
3] gives the peak field strength for PPM, rectangle magnet Halbach arrays:
where
is the maximum magnetic field in the gap,
is the residual magnetization of the permanent magnets,
is the number of magnets per period,
h is the height of the magnets,
g is the gap size, and
is the undulator period. This suggests that, all else held equal, an
array will have 0.90 times the peak field of an idealized (
) Halbach array, whereas an
array will have 0.64 times the ideal case. This result, combined with the findings in [
17], indicates that the isosceles case will have 0.76 times the field of the ideal case. The performance of the hybrid case depends on additional factors, outlined below.
Consider a magnetic circuit that is simply a “loop” of constant cross sectional area permanent magnet with an air gap. Further, assume that the B–H curve can be approximated as linear with intercepts at
, the residual magnetization, and
, the coercivity:
Typical values for
and
for high quality neodymium magnets are 1.2 T and
amp/meter, respectively [
18]. Assuming negligible fringing fields, there is constant magnetic flux,
, in both the magnet and gap:
where
A is the cross sectional area (normal to the flux),
B is the magnitude of the magnetic flux density, and the subscripts
m and
g refer to the magnet and gap, respectively. As there is no exciting current, the net magnetomotive force,
, is zero:
where
H is the magnitude of the magnetic field
and
g and
are the lengths of the flux path in the gap and magnet respectively. Using Equations (
2)–(
4) along with
, we find the field in the gap to be
As it was assumed that the PM loop was of constant area,
, so
is maximized as
and
. This result is a reasonably good approximation for the PPM undulator cases as confirmed by simulation.
Now, consider a magnet that is coupled to a gap by an infinite permeability yoke; the yoke will perfectly confine the flux allowing
. This approximates the case of the hybrid undulator where
is the thickness of the longitudinally magnetized PMs and
is their area normal to this.
can become large without affecting the period of the undulator so consider Equation (
5) in the limit
:
This result suggests that the field can become arbitrarily large as
. However, this approximation is only reasonable until the yoke material saturates, violating the “infinite permeability” assertion. As high-saturation materials like vanadium permendur [
18] offer saturation fields over 2.3 T, compared to the
of the best available permanent magnets of ~1.2 T, hybrid Halbach undulators can provide peak fields about twice as high as a PPM array.
An important caveat for these hybrid comb designs is that, to prevent leakage between the two soft ferromagnetic yoke pieces, the sections interspersed with the magnets do not cover the whole area of the magnet,
. In the particular case simulated, the yoke piece is only exposed to an effective area
(See
Figure 1d). This suggests magnets of approximately twice the area are required to get the same performance as would be possible if
; if the non-magnetic side-connecting pieces were brazed to the yoke material before machining, this might be achievable.
3. Results
The performance of Halbach comb arrays are simulated in Radia [
18] over a range of gap sizes,
g, and with several cases of the hybrid geometry shown with varying magnet areas (in terms of
). The magnets are taken to be a neodymium (NdFeB alloy) with
= 1.2 T. The soft ferromagnetic yoke material is simulated as a vanadium permendur alloy with a saturation of 2.3 T and peak relative permeability of 7000. In all the cases shown, the magnet height,
h, is held constant relative to
for all PPM cases; this means that
has square magnets, whereas
magnets are rectangular. This keeps the volume of magnetic material per period constant while
is varied for the most meaningful comparison. Additionally, the transverse dimension of the magnet is taken to be large relative to
.
To compare between the strengths of the different configurations, it is typical to characterize undulators and wigglers in terms of a unitless parameter termed the
K-value, sometimes also termed the
strength parameter.
K is defined [
19] as
where
is the maximum deflection angle of the electron beam in the undulator,
e is the electron charge,
is the electron mass,
c is the speed of light, and
is the vertical field along the undulator. To compare the strengths of undulators independent of
the mean absolute field,
, can be used instead:
will be derived from the simulated fields.
Referring to
Figure 2, the
case, although the simplest to fabricate, also gives the worst performance. For typical gap sizes on the order of
,
arrays offer a
value of only 0.42 T, whereas the isosceles case, despite having the same minimum feature size, has
= 0.52 T (24% enhancement) and the
array has
= 0.58 T (38% enhancement). The hybrid cases, on the other hand, shine at particularly low
g values where they can offer
values over 80% higher than
cases.
Both the isosceles and
cases appear to be converging to the residual magnet field,
= 1.2 T in the
limit as predicted by Equation (
5), suggesting that with four magnets per period, the flux in a loop is reasonably well approximated as normal to the loop cross section. The
case, however, is not converging to
, since with only two magnets per period, this approximation is significantly worse. Finally, looking at the hybrid cases, it appears that the approximation from Equation (
6) that
is reasonably well satisfied at values of
and that there are negligible returns to increasing the cross sectional area of the magnet any further. Despite being in the large
limit,
in the
limit does not appear to be the saturation field of the yoke material. This is due to significant flux leakage between the yokes and fringing fields. Further geometry optimization may reduce this effect.
In addition to considering the field strength, the deviation of the field compared to non-comb (no non-tooth connecting pieces) Halbach arrays should be examined. For the PPM geometries, determining this effect is especially straightforward since simply taking a linear superposition of all the magnet fields is a reasonably good approximation: it is stated in [
20] that “[rare earth magnets behave] magnetically very nearly like a vacuum with an impressed current. This makes it straightforward to predict analytically the field that will result from almost any configuration of blocks”. As adjacent connecting pieces can be selected to have opposing polarization, far-field errors are reduced. Further, any application particularly sensitive to such error fields can employ thicker teeth to increase the separation between the connecting magnets and the beam axis. Consider a concrete example of a
undulator with
and
, giving a peak field,
, of 0.78 T. Within a square region on axis, with side length equal to
, averaged over a period, the field from an array with connecting pieces has a mean absolute error (MAE) of 0.0029 T (0.37% of
), when compared to the same configuration without connecting pieces. Any integrated effects can be mitigated by alternating the polarities of the connecting pieces between adjacent combs.
As mentioned before, the connecting pieces are especially impactful for the hybrid case, reducing the effective magnet area by approximately half compared to the actual magnet area and also limiting the maximum achievable gap field due to flux leakage and fringing. Despite these challenges, the hybrid arrays can offer higher values than any PPM array.