Paper | Title | Page |
---|---|---|
THPME032 | Beam Transfer Studies for LINCE Experimental Areas | 3292 |
|
||
Funding: Work partially supported by the Spanish Government (MINECO-CDTI) under program FEDER INTERCONNECTA. Beam transport from the exit of the LINCE linac to experimental areas has been optimized for a few ion species using transfer matrix calculations performed in MADX. An alpha spectrometer based on a double-bending achromat lattice has been used as dispersion suppressor and particle tracking studies have been carried out in GPT along it and the three beamlines. Realistic quadrupole and dipole magnet design achieved in Comsol enabled accurate particle tracking studies and evaluation of the beam parameters delivered at the target. |
||
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-THPME032 | |
Export • | reference for this paper using ※ BibTeX, ※ LaTeX, ※ Text/Word, ※ RIS, ※ EndNote (xml) | |
THPME036 | ECOS-LINCE: A High Intensity Multi-ion Superconducting Linac for Nuclear Structure and Reactions | 3301 |
|
||
Funding: Work partially supported by the Spanish Government (MINECO-CDTI) under program FEDER INTERCONNECTA. During the past ten years, ECOS working group and users strongly supported the construction of a dedicated high-intensity stable-ion-beam facility in Europe, with energies at and above the Coulomb barrier as part of the Long-Range Plan of the Nuclear-Physics community. LINCE will be a multi-user facility dedicated to ECOS science: fundamental physics, astrophysics, nuclear structure and reaction dynamics. Applied research is foreseen in the fields of medical physics, aerospace and material sciences with energetic heavy ions. The facility will produce a wide range of ions, from protons (45 MeV) up to Uranium (8.5 MeV/u) with 1mA maximum beam intensity. A very compact linac has been designed by using a HV platform with a double-frequency ECR ion source, multi-harmonic buncher, an innovative CW RFQ design (1 ≤A/Q ≤ 7) and 26 accelerating cavities made of bulk niobium (β = 0.045, 0.077 and 0.15) working at 72.75 and 109.125 MHz. This article gives an outline of the accelerator complex from the ion source to the experimental areas, and presents its research potential and the relevant physics instrumentation. |
||
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-THPME036 | |
Export • | reference for this paper using ※ BibTeX, ※ LaTeX, ※ Text/Word, ※ RIS, ※ EndNote (xml) | |