6533b873fe1ef96bd12d4bb5

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Collection, cooling and delivery of ISOL beams

G. RouleauG. SavardM.d.n. LunneyR. B. Moore

subject

Nuclear and High Energy Physicsbusiness.industryChemistryRF power amplifierPenning trapIonTrap (computing)OpticsBooster (electric power)Ion trapAtomic physicsbusinessInstrumentationBeam (structure)Voltage

description

Abstract The collection of an ISOL beam in a Penning trap using implantation on a surface that is subsequently manipulated so as to become part of an end electrode of a Penning trap and reionization of the implanted material by heat has already been very productive for high-precision nuclear-mass measurements, even though it is limited to elements that are surface ionizable and the collection efficiencies are never better than about 0.1%. More recently, in 1990 a Paul trap system for electric collection of ions was installed at the ISOLDE-3 facility and collection was demonstrated for a 60 kV beam of 132 Xe ions. The purpose of this test setup was to determine the relationship between phase space volume of a typical trap and the collection efficiency that could be obtained in direct capture. For the modest trap used, collection efficiencies of up to 0.2% were achieved. A beam of negative bromine ions was collected by simply reversing the polarities of all voltages used. From the experience with this system it appears feasible to build a Paul trap which is about three times as large in linear dimensions as the existing one and which could be driven at up to 10 kV peak at 1 MHz using a modest rf amplifier (300 W). With moderate prebunching of the injected beam at 1 MHz, this system should achieve collection efficiencies approaching 100%. Based on these results, preliminary design work is being carried out on the collection system to be installed at the ISOLDE Booster facility. Suggestions for other uses of a Paul trap collection system for ISOL beams are presented.

https://doi.org/10.1016/0168-583x(92)95970-3