Author: Watanabe, T.
Paper Title Page
MOPCP068 Stable Operation of RF Systems for RIBF 186
 
  • K. Suda, M. Fujimaki, N. Fukunishi, M. Hemmi, O. Kamigaito, M. Kase, R. Koyama, K. Kumagai, N. Sakamoto, T. Watanabe, K. Yamada
    RIKEN Nishina Center, Wako, Japan
 
  At RIKEN RI-Beam Factory (RIBF), heavy ion beams are accelerated up to 345 MeV/u by using the RIKEN heavy ion linac (RILAC) and four ring cyclotrons. In order to provide high intensity beams up to 1puA, all the RF systems must be stable enough for a long term (a few weeks), within ±0.1% in voltages and ±0.1 degrees in phases. For a stable operation of RIBF, we have started to monitor for the RF voltages and phases for all the RF systems, and beam intensity and phases using lock-in amplifiers. We have investigated a degree of stability of the RF systems. Then, we have performed several improvements. The Automatic Gain Control units for RILAC were replaced for a better stability. It was found that the stability of RF systems was considerably affected by the fluctuation of reference signals. The fluctuation was mainly caused by the temperature dependence of power dividers used for a reference signal distribution. Therefore, we have changed the distribution method. The reference signal is first amplified to 40 dBm and divided by directional couplers, and they are delivered to low level circuits. The present degree of stability of the RF systems will be presented.  
 
MOPCP094 Consistency in Measurement of Beam Phase and Beam Intensity Using Lock-in Amplifier and Oscilloscope Systems 245
 
  • R. Koyama, M. Fujimaki, N. Fukunishi, A. Goto, M. Hemmi, O. Kamigaito, M. Kase, N. Sakamoto, K. Suda, T. Watanabe, K. Yamada
    RIKEN Nishina Center, Wako, Japan
 
  The RIKEN RI beam factory (RIBF) consists of four ring cyclotrons (RRC, fRC, IRC, and SRC) and two injectors (RILAC and AVF) which are all connected in cascade. RILAC, AVF, and RRC began operation in the 1980s, and fRC, IRC, and SRC were installed in 2006. Phase probes (PPs) are installed in all cyclotrons and beam transport lines of RIBF, and the beam-bunch signals that are detected nondestructively by these PPs are used for tuning of isochronous magnetic field of cyclotrons and for monitoring the beam phase and beam intensity. We mainly use a newly developed system that incorporates a lock-in amplifier (LIA; SR844, SRS) for those tuning and monitoring; however, in AVF and RRC, a conventional measurement method using an oscilloscope system (OSC; DSO6052A, Agilent) is used. In this study, we investigated the consistency in the measurements carried out using LIA and OSC systems by Fourier analyzing the observed data. Additionally, we investigated the resolution and measurement uncertainty of LIA and OSC.  
 
TUM2CIO01 Status of RIBF Accelerators at RIKEN 286
 
  • O. Kamigaito, S. Arai, T. Dantsuka, M. Fujimaki, T. Fujinawa, H. Fujisawa, N. Fukunishi, A. Goto, H. Hasebe, Y. Higurashi, K. Ikegami, E. Ikezawa, H. Imao, T. Kageyama, M. Kase, M. Kidera, M. Komiyama, H. Kuboki, K. Kumagai, T. Maie, M. Nagase, T. Nakagawa, M. Nakamura, J. Ohnishi, H. Okuno, N. Sakamoto, K. Suda, H. Watanabe, T. Watanabe, Y. Watanabe, K. Yamada, Y. Yano, S. Yokouchi
    RIKEN Nishina Center, Wako, Japan
 
  Recent developments and upgrade program in the near future at RIKEN RI-Beam Factory (RIBF) are presented. The beam intensity and available ion species are increasing at RIBF, owing to the continuous efforts that have been paid since the first beam in 2006. So far, we accelerated deuteron, helium, nitrogen, oxygen, aluminum, calcium, krypton, and uranium beams with the superconducting ring cyclotron, SRC. The extracted beam intensities reached 1,000 pnA for helium and oxygen beams. From the operational point of view, however, the intensity of the uranium beam should be much increased. We are, therefore, constructing a new injector linac for the RIBF, consisting of a superconducting ECR ion source, RFQ, and DTL, which will be commissioned in this fiscal year. By using this injector, we also aim at independent operation of the RIBF and GARIS facility for super-heavy element synthesis.  
slides icon Slides TUM2CIO01 [4.914 MB]  
 
WEM2CCO05 Beam Diagnostics for RIBF in RIKEN 351
 
  • T. Watanabe, M. Fujimaki, N. Fukunishi, O. Kamigaito, M. Kase, M. Komiyama, R. Koyama, H. Watanabe
    RIKEN Nishina Center, Wako, Japan
 
  In the present work, many varieties of beam diagnostics have been played a tremendous role for the RIBF (RI Beam Factory) in RIKEN. During beam user's experiments, it is essential to keep the beam transmission efficiency as high as possible, because the production of RI beams requires an intense primary beam, and the activation of the beam transport chambers induced by beam loss should be avoided. This presentation will include the overview of the Faraday cups, the transverse beam profile monitors, radial probes and phase probes to tune the accelerators and the beam transport line. To realize the stable operation of the accelerator complex, the nondestructive monitoring system of RF fields and beam-phase by using lock-in amplifies are used. Plastic scintillation monitors have been fabricated to evaluate the energy and longitudinal profiles of heavy-ion beams. Furthermore, a highly sensitive beam current (position) monitor with a high Tc (Critical Temperature) SQUID (Superconducting QUantum Interference Device) monitor, has been developed. We will report the present status of the facility, the details of the beam diagnostics and the results of the beam measurement.  
slides icon Slides WEM2CCO05 [6.855 MB]