A lens system consisting of two electrostatic quadrupole triplets has been designed and constructed at the Radiological Research Accelerator Facility (RARAF) of Columbia University. The lens system has been used to focus 6-MeV 4He ions to a beam spot in air with a diameter of 0.8 µm. The quadrupole electrodes can withstand voltages high enough to focus 4He ions up to 10 MeV and protons up to 5 MeV. The quadrupole triplet design is novel in that alignment is made through precise construction and the relative strengths of the quadrupoles are accomplished by the lengths of the elements, so that the magnitudes of the voltages required for focusing are nearly identical. The insulating sections between electrodes have had ion implantation to improve the voltage stability of the lens. The lens design employs Russian symmetry for the quadrupole elements.
A short probe-forming system is developed for the Columbia Microprobe that includes four electrostatic quadrupoles with a Russian quadruplet configuration. The smallest beam spot size and appropriate optimal parameters of the probe-forming systems have been found. These parameters of the system are compared with appropriate parameters of other field configurations including the electrostatic and magnetic fields with dipole, quadrupole, and rotational symmetry. The new original construction of the electrostatic quadruplet has been manufactured. The sensitivity of this quadruplet to some misalignments of the construction is investigated.
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