Focusing and neutralization of intense beams

  • Simon S. Yu
  • , Andre Anders
  • , F. M. Bieniosek
  • , Shmuel Eylon
  • , Enrique Henestroza
  • , Prabir Roy
  • , Derek Shuman
  • , William Waldron
  • , William Sharp
  • , Dave Rose
  • , Dale Welch
  • , Philip Efthimion
  • , Eric Gilson

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

In heavy ion inertial confinement fusion systems, intense beams of ions must be transported from the exit of the final focus magnet system through the target chamber to hit millimeter spot sizes on the target. Effective plasma neutralization of intense ion beams through the target chamber is essential for the viability of an economically competitive heavy ion fusion power plant. The physics of neutralized drift has been studied extensively with PIC simulations. To provide quantitative comparisons of theoretical predictions with experiment, the Heavy Ion Fusion Virtual National Laboratory has completed the construction and has begun experimentation with the NTX (Neutralized Transport Experiment) as shown in Figure 1. The experiment consists of 3 phases, each with physics issues of its own. Phase 1 is designed to generate a very high brightness potassium beam with variable perveance, using a beam aperturing technique. Phase 2 consists of magnetic transport through four pulsed quadrupoles. Here, beam tuning as well as, the effects of phase space dilution through higher order nonlinear fields must be understood. In Phase 3, a converging ion beam at the exit of the magnetic section is transported through a drift section with plasma sources for beam neutralization, and the final spot size is measured under various conditions of neutralization. In this paper, we present first results from all 3 phases of the experiment.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages98-101
Number of pages4
StatePublished - 2003
EventPAC 2003 - Proceedings of the 2003 IEEE Particle Accelerator Conference - Portland, OR, United States
Duration: May 12 2003May 16 2003

Conference

ConferencePAC 2003 - Proceedings of the 2003 IEEE Particle Accelerator Conference
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityPortland, OR
Period5/12/035/16/03

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • General Engineering

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