Author: Sen, A.
Paper Title Page
MOM2CCO03 Progress towards High Intensity Heavy Ion Beams at the AGOR-Facility 21
 
  • S. Brandenburg, J.P.M. Beijers, M.A. Hevinga, M.A. Hofstee, H.R. Kremers, V. Mironov, J. Mulder, S. Saminathan, A. Sen
    KVI, Groningen, The Netherlands
 
  Funding: This work is supported by the European Union through EURONS, contract 506065 and the "Stichting voor Fundamenteel Onderzoek der Materie" (FOM).
The on-going upgrade program of the AGOR-facility aiming at intensities beyond 1012 pps for heavy ion beams up to Pb will be discussed. The progress in the main elements of the program (further development of the ECR-source; improvement of the transmission into and through the cyclotron and protection of equipment agains excessive beam loss) will be reported. Further improvement of the ECR ion source is facilitated by the installation of a second source. Redesign of the LEBT to compensate aberrations is in progress; simulations predict a significant increase in transmission. A new, cooled electrostatic extractor is being commissioned and the beam loss control system has been completed. The main remaining issue is vacuum degradation induced by beam loss caused by charge exchange on the residual gas. Experiments at GSI[1] have shown that scrapers and surface coatings can strongly reduce this effect. Tracking calculations of the distribution of the beam losses over the vacuum chamber to determine the optimum location of scrapers and application of a gold coating to relevant parts of the vacuum chamber are underway.
[1] C. Omet, H. Kollmus, H. Reich-Sprenger, P. Spiller; Ion catcher system for the stabilisation of the dynamic pressure in SIS18; http://jacow.org/e08/papers/mopc099.pdf
 
slides icon Slides MOM2CCO03 [1.532 MB]  
 
MOPCP083 Vacuum Simulation for Heavy Ion Beams in the AGOR-Cyclotron 221
 
  • A. Sen, S. Brandenburg, M.A. Hofstee, M.J. van Goethem
    KVI, Groningen, The Netherlands
 
  Funding: This work is supported by the European Union through EURONS, contract 506065 and the "Stichting voor Fundamenteel Onderzoek der Materie" (FOM).
The vacuum in the AGOR cyclotron and thereby the beam transmission is beam intensity dependent for heavy ions. The onset of significant vacuum and transmission degradation is dependent on the ion species and final energy. For 20Ne6+ @ 23 MeV/A no significant effects are observed for intensities up to at least 2 x 1012 pps, while for 206Pb27+ @ 8.5 MeV/A degradation sets in at around 1011 pps. This process is driven by the loss of particles through charge exchange with the residual gas and subsequent desorption from the chamber walls induced by the lost particles. We are developing a model based on particle tracking simulations of beam particles after charge exchange and 3D vacuum simulation including the experimentally determined 'regular' out gassing and induced desorption. An experimental setup to measure beam induced desorption was built and tested. It will be used to evaluate the mitigation measures such as surface treatment and stimulated out gassing. Improvement of the vacuum in the injection line, which is limiting the overall transmission, is also presented.