Title :
25 years of technical advances in RFQ accelerators
Author_Institution :
Los Alamos Nat. Lab., NM, USA
Abstract :
The radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ) accelerator began as "The ion linear accelerator with space-uniform strong focusing" conceived by I.M. Kapchinskii and V.A. Teplyakov [1970]. In 1979, R.H. Stokes, K.R. Crandall, J.E. Stovall and D.A. Swenson gave this concept the name RFQ. Shortly after Valentine\´s Day in 1980 a telegram was sent to I.M. Kapchinskii. It stated, "The RFQ is alive and well at the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory". Thus begins a very informative story of the early history of the development of the RFQ. By 1983, at least 15 laboratories throughout the world were working on various RFQ designs. H. Klein wrote an excellent review of a number of different RFQ structures [1983]. In the early years, there were many types of geometry considered for the RFQ, but only a few types have survived. The two cavity geometries now used in almost all RFQs are the 4-vane and 4-rod structures. The 4-vane structure is the most popular because its operating frequency range (80 to ∼500 MHz) is suitable for light ions. Heavy ions require low frequencies (below 200 MHz). Because the 4-rod structure has smaller transverse dimensions than a 4-vane RFQ at the same frequency, the 4-rod RFQ is often preferred for these applications. This paper will describe how the RFQ accelerates and focuses the beam. The paper also discusses some of the important technical advances in designing and building RFQs.
Keywords :
accelerator RF systems; accelerator cavities; linear accelerators; particle beam dynamics; particle beam focusing; reviews; 4-rod structures; 4-vane structures; POP RFQ; RFQ accelerator; beam dynamics; cavity geometries; dipole suppression; ion linear accelerator; radio frequency quadrupole accelerator; space-uniform strong focusing; technical advances; Acceleration; Blades; Electrodes; Geometry; Ion accelerators; Ion beams; Laboratories; Linear accelerators; Radio frequency; Voltage;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 2003. PAC 2003. Proceedings of the
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7738-9
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.2003.1288841