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<xml>
  <records>
    <record>
       <contributors>
          <authors>
             <author>Zholents, A.</author>
             <author>Baturin, S.</author>
             <author>Doran, D.S.</author>
             <author>Jansma, W.G.</author>
             <author>Kasa, M.</author>
             <author>Nassiri, A.</author>
             <author>Piot, P.</author>
             <author>Power, J.G.</author>
             <author>Siy, A.E.</author>
             <author>Sorsher, S.</author>
             <author>Suthar, K.J.</author>
             <author>Tan, W.H.</author>
             <author>Trakhtenberg, E.</author>
             <author>Waldschmidt, G.J.</author>
             <author>Xu, J.Z.</author>
          </authors>
       </contributors>
       <titles>
          <title>
             A Compact High Repetition Rate Free-Electron Laser Based on the  Advanced Wakefield Accelerator Technology
          </title>
       </titles>
       <publisher>JACoW Publishing</publisher>
       <pub-location>Geneva, Switzerland</pub-location>
       <abstract>
          Significant progress has been made at ANL in the design of a hard x-ray facility based on the array of compact free-electron lasers (FELs). Each FEL uses a dedicated compact collinear wakefield accelerator (CWA) delivering 5-GeV electron bunches with up to 50-kHz repetition rate. The CWA uses a cylindrical copper structure with a 2-mm ID and fine corrugations on the wall. It causes a 10-nC &quot;drive&quot; bunch to radiate an electromagnetic field with a field amplitude ~ 100 MV/m acting on a ~ 0.3-nC &quot;witness&quot; bunch trailing behind. The entire accelerator will span a few tens of meters and will contain almost identical ~ 0.5-m-long accelerator modules. The accelerator module includes a 4-cm-long transition section with an output coupler, a notch filter, an integrated offset monitor, bellows, pumping and water-cooling ports. All CWAs share a 1-GeV superconducting linac for production of asymmetrically shaped drive bunches with a high repetition rate. The design of this accelerator is nearing completion and will be presented. Plans for the prototyping and &quot;cold&quot; testing of the accelerator module will be discussed, and first results of the test with the electron beam will be presented.
       </abstract>
    </record>
  </records>
</xml>
