“…In the past two decades, significant progress has been made in the construction of compact laserplasma accelerators, and the generated ion beams generally have either small emittance [4], large charge [5,6] or high energy [7][8][9]. Ion sources with these properties have a wide range of applications [10] in diverse fields, such as proton radiography [11,12], tumor therapy [13,14], fast ignition [15], and the study of nuclear physics [16,17]. There are various mechanisms for laser-driven ion acceleration, including target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) [18,19], radiation pressure acceleration [20,21], collisionless shockwave acceleration [22,23], magnetic vortex acceleration (MVA) [24][25][26], Coulomb explosion [27], and so forth.…”