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ion-source

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TUPSM006 A Non Destructive Laser Wire for H- Ion Beams ion, laser, electron, acceleration 101
 
  • C. Gabor
    STFC/RAL/ASTeC, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon
  • G.A. Blair, G.E. Boorman, A. Bosco
    Royal Holloway, University of London, Surrey
  • A.P. Letchford
    STFC/RAL/ISIS, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon
 
 

The front end test stand FETS is an R&D project hosted at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory RAL with its aim to demonstrate a high power, fast chopped H- ion beam and will consist in final stage of ion source, low energy beam transport LEBT, RFQ and a transport line including a chopper system at 3MeV output energy. Possible candidates of applications are Isis upgrade (RAL neutron source), future spallation sources or the Neutrino factory. The high beam power may cause problems due to its thermal power deposition on diagnostics parts introduced into the beam so non-interceptive beam instruments are highly preferred to avoid those problems. Diagnostics for H- beams can benefit of laser light where photons with suitable energy are able to detach the additional electron. This method is applied to a beam profile monitor close to the ion source of the FETS beam line and the paper gives a status report of the ongoing process of commissioning and provides a detailed discussion of problems and recent changes including first "proof-of-principle" measurements.

 
TUPSM058 Comparison of Extraction and Beam Transport Simulations with Emittance Measurements from the ECR Ion Source VENUS ion, simulation, extraction, ECR 287
 
  • D. Winklehner, J.Y. Benitez, D. Leitner, M.M. Strohmeier, D.S. Todd
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • D.P. Grote
    LLNL, Livermore, California
 
 

The versatility of the beams that ECR ion sources can provide make them the injector of choice for many heavy ion accelerators. However, the design of the LEBT* systems for these devices is challenging because the LEBT has to be matched for a wide variety of ions. In addition, due to the magnetic confinement fields, the ion density distribution across the extraction aperture is inhomogeneous and charge state dependent, and the ion beam is extracted from a region of high axial magnetic field, which adds a rotational component to the beam. In this presentation a simulation model for ECR ion source beams is described. The initial conditions (i.e., spatial and velocity distribution of the ions prior to extraction from the ion source) are obtained semi-empirically. Extraction from the plasma is then simulated with the particle-in-cell code WARP. The same code is used for the actual simulation of ion transport through the beam line. Simulations of a beam containing uranium ions of charge state 18+ to 42+, as well as other ions due to the use of support gases, extracted from VENUS**, are presented and compared to emittance measurements.

 

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Poster

 
TUPSM061 Emittance Measurements at the LBNL ECR and AECR-U Ion Sources Using a Pepper-Pot Emittance Scanner emittance, ion, ECR, extraction 302
 
  • M.M. Strohmeier, J.Y. Benitez, D. Leitner, C.M. Lyneis, D.S. Todd, D. Winklehner
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • M. Bantel
    University of Applied Sciences Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe
 
 

Two ECR* ion sources are currently available to inject beams into the 88-Inch Cyclotron at LBNL.** The recently commissioned pepper-pot emittance scanner at LBNL was used to measure the beam emittance for various ion species of both sources. A pepper-pot scanner is capable of extracting the full four-dimensional transverse phase space of the beam, allowing for the calculation of the cross coupled emittances xy' and yx'. This is especially of interest for ECR ion sources where asymmetric beams are extracted in the presence of a strong solenoid field. The axial field adds a rotational momentum to the extracted beam, resulting in a transverse emittance growth, which depends on the magnetic stiffness of the extracted species. In this paper, the pepper-pot setup is described and emittance data from both LBNL ECR sources are presented and compared. The data confirm a strong mass dependence of the normalized emittance for ions with the same mass to charge state ratio as previously also measured by other groups. This dependence indicates a different particle distribution at the extraction aperture for different ion species.

 

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Poster

 
TUPSM076 First Beam Measurements of the FNAL HINS RFQ rfq, diagnostics, ion, proton 359
 
  • V.E. Scarpine, S. Chaurize, B.M. Hanna, J. Steimel, R.C. Webber, D. Wildman, D.H. Zhang
    Fermilab, Batavia
 
 

The Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (FNAL) High Intensity Neutrino Sources (HINS) is a research project to address accelerator physics and technology questions for a new concept, low-energy, high-intensity long pulse H- superconducting linac. HINS will consist of a 50 keV ion source, a 2.5 MeV Radiofrequency Quadrupole (RFQ), and a 10 MeV room temperature spoke resonator acceleration section followed by superconducting spoke resonator acceleration sections. At this time a proton ion source and the RFQ module have operated with beam. This paper will present the results of first beam measurements through the HINS RFQ.

 
WEIMNB01 Ion Beam Properties and their Diagnostics for ECR Ion Source Injector Systems ion, emittance, ECR, plasma 498
 
  • D. Leitner
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
 
 

Electron Cyclotron Resonance (ECR) ion sources are an essential component of heavy-ion accelerators due to their ability to produce wide range of ions as required by these facilities. The ever-increasing intensity demands have led to remarkable performance improvements of ECR injector systems, due to advances in magnet technology as well as an improved understanding of the ECR ion source plasma physics. At the same time, enhanced diagnostics and simulation capabilities have improved the understanding of the injector beam transport properties. However, the initial ion beam distribution at the extraction aperture is still a subject of research. Due to the magnetic confinement necessary to sustain the ECR plasma, the ion density distribution across the extraction aperture is inhomogeneous and charge-state-dependent. In addition, the ion beam is extracted from a region of high axial magnetic field, which adds a rotational component to the beam; this leads to emittance growth. This talk will review the ongoing simulation and diagnostics efforts at LBNL to develop a consistent modeling tool for the design of an optimized beam transport system for ECR ion sources.

 

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