CERN's 160 MeV H(-) linear accelerator (Linac4) is a key constituent of the injector chain upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider that is being installed and commissioned. A cesiated surface ion source prototype is being tested and has delivered a beam intensity of 45 mA within an emittance of 0.3 π ⋅ mm ⋅ mrad. The optimum ratio of the co-extracted electron- to ion-current is below 1 and the best production efficiency, defined as the ratio of the beam current to the 2 MHz RF-power transmitted to the plasma, reached 1.1 mA/kW. The H(-) source prototype and the first tests of the new ion source optics, electron-dump, and front end developed to minimize the beam emittance are presented. A temperature regulated magnetron H(-) source developed by the Brookhaven National Laboratory was built at CERN. The first tests of the magnetron operated at 0.8 Hz repetition rate are described.
CERN's Linac4 45 kV H-ion sources prototypes are installed at a dedicated ion source test stand and in the Linac4 tunnel. The operation of the pulsed hydrogen injection, RF sustained plasma and pulsed high voltages are described. The first experimental results of two prototypes relying on 2MHz RF-plasma heating are presented. The plasma is ignited via capacitive coupling, and sustained by inductive coupling. The light emitted from the plasma is collected by viewports pointing to the plasma chamber wall in the middle of the RF solenoid and to the plasma chamber axis. Preliminary measurements of optical emission spectroscopy and photometry of the plasma have been performed. The design of a cesiated ion source is presented. The volume source has produced a 45 keV H-beam of 16-22 mA which has successfully been used for the commissioning of the Low Energy Beam Transport (LEBT), Radio Frequency Quadrupole (RFQ) accelerator and chopper of Linac4.
Spatial non-uniformity of the dissociative hydrogen atom (H0) production has been investigated in a large negative ion source (JAEA 10 A source) with the electron energy distribution function (EEDF) obtained by a Monte-Carlo simulation code for electron transport in 3D3V (three dimensional real and velocity) space. It has been shown that the H0 production rate becomes larger in the upper region (one side in the longitudinal direction) of the source chamber. This spatial non-uniformity of the H0 production profile is mainly explained by the non-equilibrium features of the EEDF in the upper region, i.e., the EEDF consists of thermal electron component with kinetic energy ε < 25 eV and fast electron component with energy ε > 25 eV in the upper region, while the EEDF mainly consists of only thermal electrons in the bottom region. These characteristics for the EEDF and the energy dependence of cross-sections for dissociation and dissociative ionization processes lead to the non-uniform profile of the H0 production. The above numerical results of the spatial H0 non-uniformity are validated and confirmed by comparisons with those by spectroscopic measurement. It has been clarified that the non-equilibrium (fast electron) component of the EEDF has a large contribution to the non-uniformity of the H0 production rate.
The present status of kinetic modeling of particle dynamics in hydrogen negative ion (H − ) source plasmas and their comparisons with experiments are reviewed and discussed with some new results. The main focus is placed on the following topics, which are important for the research and development of H − sources for intense and high-quality H − ion beams: (i) effects of non-equilibrium features of electron energy distribution function on volume and surface H − production, (ii) the origin of the spatial non-uniformity in giant multi-cusp arc-discharge H − sources, (iii) capacitive to inductive (E to H) mode transition in radio frequency-inductively coupled plasma H − sources and (iv) extraction physics of H − ions and beam optics, especially the present understanding of the meniscus formation in strongly electronegative plasmas (so-called ion-ion plasmas) and its effect on beam optics. For these topics, mainly Japanese modeling activities, and their domestic and international collaborations with experimental studies, are introduced with some examples showing how models have been improved and to what extent the modeling studies can presently contribute to improving the source performance. Close collaboration between experimental and modeling activities is indispensable for the validation/improvement of the modeling and its contribution to the source design/development. chamber wall (anode) and filaments (cathode). In the latter sources, the RF-electromagnetic field is used to generate and heat plasmas.In this review, we mainly focus on the modeling studies, especially the modeling study of H − source plasmas using kinetic approaches, such as the test particle Monte-Carlo model [14] and particle in cell (PIC) model [14,15], which has been reviewed in [16]. Here, we extend it with some new results. Close collaboration between the experimental and modeling study is very important as it can improve our basic understanding of source plasmas. Various examples of the model validation will be shown through comparisons with experiments and also how modeling studies contribute to the improvement of source performances.As for the multi-cusp arc-discharge source, we will first show a systematic study to help us understand the role of the EEDF on the H − VP in section 2.2. The study has been carried out for a compact multi-cusp arcdischarge source (SHI H − source: Sumitomo Heavy Industry H − source [17,18]) for medical application such as boron neutron capture therapy and the radioisotope production for molecular imaging technology.The SHI H − source is a typical tandem type H − source [19]. In such a tandem type volume sources, the plasma source volume is divided into two regions by the transverse magnetic field (the so-called magnetic filter filed: MF-field) to control the EEDFs and to promote the two step H − VP reactions explained above. Namely, the source volume consists of two regions: (1) the 'driver region' where the electron energy is high and the EV process is promoted, and (2) the 'extraction region' where the electr...
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