DocumentCode
228198
Title
Characteristics of intense pulsed heavy ion beam by bipolar pulse accelerator
Author
Okajima, K. ; Ohashi, H. ; Ito, H.
Author_Institution
Grad. Sch. of Sci. & Eng. for Res., Univ. of Toyama, Toyama, Japan
fYear
2014
fDate
25-29 May 2014
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
5
Abstract
We have developed a new type of a pulsed ion beam accelerator named “bipolar pulse accelerator” for improvement of the purity of the intense pulsed ion beam. The system utilizes a magnetically insulated accelerate on gap and was operated with the bipolar pulse. A coaxial gas puff plasma gun was used as an ion source, which was placed inside of the grounded anode. Source plasma (nitrogen) of current density of ≈30 A/cm2 and pulse duration of ≈1.0 μs was injected into the acceleration gap. When the bipolar pulse with voltage of about ±110 kV and pulse duration of about 70 ns was applied to the drift tube, the ions were successfully accelerated from the grounded anode to the drift tube in the 1st gap by the negative pulse of the bipolar pulse. The pulsed ion beam with current density of 70 A/cm2 and pulse duration of ≈50 ns was obtained at 50 mm downstream from the anode surface. The energy spectrum of the ion beam was evaluated by a magnetic energy spectrometer. The ion energy was in reasonable good agreement with the acceleration voltage, i.e., 1st pulse (negative pulse) voltage of the bipolar pulse.
Keywords
ion sources; particle beam injection; plasma guns; acceleration gap; acceleration voltage; anode surface; bipolar pulse accelerator; coaxial gas puff plasma gun; current density; drift tube; energy spectrum; intense pulsed heavy ion beam accelerator; ion source; magnetic energy spectrometer; plasma source; pulse duration; Acceleration; Anodes; Current density; Electron tubes; Ion beams; Ion sources; Plasmas;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Plasma Sciences (ICOPS) held with 2014 IEEE International Conference on High-Power Particle Beams (BEAMS), 2014 IEEE 41st International Conference on
Conference_Location
Washington, DC
Print_ISBN
978-1-4799-2711-1
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PLASMA.2014.7012754
Filename
7012754
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