
Intense heavy-ion beam transport with electric and magnetic quadrupoles
Author(s) -
T.J. Fessenden,
J J Barnard,
M D Cable,
F J Deadrick,
S Eylon,
M B Nelson,
T. C. Sangster,
H. S. Hopkins
Publication year - 1995
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/132777
Subject(s) - beam (structure) , thermal emittance , physics , beam emittance , optics , magnet , voltage , ion beam , atomic physics , nuclear magnetic resonance , quantum mechanics
As part of the small induction recirculator development at LLNL, the authors are testing an injector and transport line that delivers 4 {micro}s beams of potassium with repetition rates up to 10 Hz at a nominal current of 2 mA. The normalized K-V equivalent emittance of the beams is near 0.02 {pi} mm-mrad and is mostly determined by the temperature of the source (0.1 eV). K{sup +} ions generated at 80 keV in a Pierce diode are matched to an alternating gradient transport line by seven electric quadrupoles. Two additional quads have been modified to serve as two-axis steerers. The matching section is followed by a transport section comprised of seven permanent magnet quadrupoles. Matching to this section is achieved by adjusting the voltages on the electric quadrupoles to voltages calculated by an envelope matching code. Measurements of beam envelope parameters are made at the matching section entrance and exit as well as at the end of the permanent magnet transport section. Beam current waveforms along the experiment are compared with results from a one-dimension longitudinal dynamics code. Initial experiments show particle loss occurring at the beam head as a result of overtaking. The apparatus is also being used for the development of non or minimally intercepting diagnostics for future recirculator experiments. These include capacitive monitors for determining beam line-charge density and position in the recirculator; flying wire scanners for beam position; and gated TV scanners for measuring beam profiles and emittance