The invention relates to a cascade accelerator which has two sets of respectively series-connected capacitors connected up via diodes in the manner of a Greinacher cascade. It further relates to a beam therapy device having such a cascade accelerator.
Ionizing radiation is used in medical beam therapy in order to cure diseases or to delay their progress. It is chiefly gamma radiation, X-radiation and electrons that are used as ionizing, high energy beams.
In order to produce an electron beam either for direct therapeutic use or for the production of an X-radiation, it is customary to make use of particle accelerators. In particle accelerators, charged particles are brought by electric fields to high speeds and thus high kinetic energies, the electric fields resulting in the case of some accelerator types from electromagnetic induction in variable magnetic fields. In this case, the particles require a kinetic energy that corresponds to a multiple of their natural rest energy.
In the case of the particle accelerators, a distinction is made between particle accelerators with cyclic acceleration, such as the betatron or cyclotron, for example, and those with rectilinear acceleration. The latter enable a more compact design and also comprise so-called cascade accelerators (also Cockcroft-Walton accelerators), in the case of which a Greinacher circuit that is multiply connected in series (cascaded) can be used to produce a high DC voltage, and thus a strong electric field, by multiplication and rectification of an AC voltage.
The mode of operation of the Greinacher circuit is based on an arrangement of diodes and capacitors. The negative half wave of an AC voltage source charges a first capacitor via a first diode to the voltage of the AC voltage source. In the case of the positive half wave following thereupon, the voltage of the first capacitor is then added to the voltage of the AC voltage source so that a second capacitor is now charged via a second diode to double the output voltage of the AC voltage source. A voltage multiplier is thus obtained by multiple cascading in the manner of a Greinacher cascade. The respectively first capacitors in this case form a first set of capacitors, connected directly in series, of the cascade, while the respectively second capacitors form a corresponding second set. The diodes form the cross connection between the sets.
Comparatively high particle energies in the region of mega-electron volts can be achieved in such a cascade accelerator. However, in this case there is the risk of electric flashovers (air breakdown voltage: 3 kV/mm), particularly with cascade accelerators set up under normal atmospheric pressure, as a result of which the maximum particle energy is undesirably limited.
According to various embodiments, a cascade accelerator that has a particularly high achievable particle energy in conjunction with a compact design can be specified.
According to an embodiment, a cascade accelerator may have two sets of respectively series-connected capacitors connected up via diodes in the manner of a Greinacher cascade, and an acceleration channel formed by openings in the electrodes of the capacitors of a set and directed at a particle source arranged in the region of the electrode with the highest voltage, the electrodes being insulated from one another, except for the acceleration channel, by a solid or liquid insulating material.
According to a further embodiment, a plurality of electrodes can be designed as hollow ellipsoidal segments arranged concentrically around the particle source in a fashion separated from one another. According to a further embodiment, the respective hollow ellipsoidal segment can be a hollow half ellipsoid, and the acceleration channel can be guided through the vertex of the hollow half ellipsoid. According to a further embodiment, the respective diode can be arranged in the region of a great circle of the respective hollow half ellipsoid. According to a further embodiment, a plurality of electrodes can be spaced apart equidistantly from one another. According to a further embodiment, the particle source can be a cold cathode. According to a further embodiment, the acceleration channel may comprises a cylindrical wall that is coated with diamond-like carbon and/or oxidized diamond.
According to another embodiment, a beam therapy device may have a cascade accelerator as described above.
An exemplary embodiment is explained in more detail with the aid of a drawing, in which:
Identical parts are provided in the two figures with the same reference symbols.
According to various embodiments, a cascade accelerator may comprise an acceleration channel formed by openings in the electrodes of the capacitors of a set and directed at a particle source arranged in the region of the electrode with the highest voltage, the electrodes of the capacitors being insulated from one another, except for the acceleration channel, by a solid or liquid insulating material.
According to various embodiments, the energy of the generated particle beam of the cascade accelerator could be increased by increasing the acceleration voltage. In order to minimize the risk of electric flashover resulting therefrom, the spacing of the individual capacitor plates of the cascade accelerator could be increased. However, this would contradict a compact design, something which is desired precisely, for the ability of use in the field of medicine. In order to enable the acceleration voltage to be increased in conjunction with a compact design, the capacitors therefore should be protected in some other way against electric flashovers. To this end, appropriate liquid or solid insulators that enable reliable insulation of the capacitor plates should be used. This can be achieved by filling up the interspaces of the electrodes with a solid or liquid insulating material except for the acceleration channel.
The high voltages produced in a cascade accelerator should be protected against electric breakdown by an appropriate configuration of the geometry in addition to an appropriate insulation thickness. Consequently, the production of voltage should be integrated with the particle accelerator, and the components having particularly high voltage should be accommodated within the smallest possible volume. Since the maximum electric field strength is proportional to the curvature of the electrodes, a spherical or ellipsoidal geometry is of particular advantage. In particular, a spherical geometry signifies a particularly small volume with regard to the maximum possible electric field strength inside the insulator, and therefore also a particularly small mass. However, in specific designs a deformation toward an ellipsoid may be desired. Consequently, it is advantageous to design a plurality of electrodes as concentric hollow ellipsoidal segments arranged around the particle source in a fashion separated from one another.
A particularly simple design that combines the advantages of an ellipsoidal geometry with the simple production of voltage inside a Greinacher cascade is possible by respectively having hollow half ellipsoids as the electrodes designed as hollow ellipsoid segments, that is to say by arranging for a separation at the equator of the respective hollow ellipsoid so that the multiple layers of hollow half ellipsoids thus produced form the two sets of capacitors that are required for the Greinacher cascade. The acceleration channel is then advantageously guided through the vertex of the respective hollow half ellipsoid, a particularly simple geometry thereby being achieved.
In a further configuration, the respective diodes are arranged in the region of a great circle of the respective hollow half ellipsoid. If, specifically, the hollow half ellipsoids respectively form the two sets of capacitors respectively connected in series, the diodes respectively connect hollow half ellipsoids on alternating hemispheres. The diodes can then be arranged inside an equatorial section for the purpose of a particularly simple design.
In order to attain a particularly high stability of the cascade accelerator against breakdowns, a uniform voltage gradient should be provided along the acceleration path, that is to say between the individual electrodes of the Greinacher cascade. This can be achieved by a plurality of electrodes being spaced apart equidistantly from one another. Since the electrodes of each set have a linear voltage rise, a virtually linear rise in the voltage results thereby along the acceleration channel.
In a further configuration, the particle source is a cold cathode. Electrodes of a cold cathode are unheated and also remain so cold in operation that no thermionic emission takes place at them. A particularly simple design of the cascade accelerator is enabled thereby.
The acceleration channel permits the particle current to be extracted from the cascade accelerator. The acceleration channel should comprise a cylindrical wall that is coated with diamond-like carbon and/or oxidized diamond in order for the acceleration channel also to withstand the tangential electric fields without breakdown. These materials are capable of withstanding these comparatively high voltages.
Such a cascade accelerator is advantageously used in a beam therapy device.
The advantages attained by the various embodiments consist, in particular, in that it is possible in the case of a cascade accelerator based on a Greinacher cascade to produce a particularly high acceleration voltage for accelerating charged particles by embedding the particle source and/or electrodes in a solid or liquid insulating material. Given a design of the electrodes using a spherical or ellipsoid geometry, a particularly compact design is possible, moreover, and the two capacitor sets of the Greinacher circuit are additionally used as concentric potential equilibration electrodes for the electric field distribution around the particle source and high voltage electrode. Such a cascade accelerator enables a particularly high voltage in conjunction with a particularly compact design as is required, in particular, in medical applications.
The cascade generator 1 according to
Guided through the second set of electrodes 4 is an acceleration channel 8 that is directed at the particle source 6 and permits an extraction of the particle current 10 that emanates from the particle source 6 and experiences a high acceleration voltage from the hollow spherical high voltage electrode 12.
In order to prevent breakdown of the high voltage of the high voltage electrode 12 on the particle source 6 in the interior, the particle source 6 can be completely embedded in a solid or liquid insulating material 14 so that the space between the high voltage electrode 12 and particle source 6 is filled up with the insulating material 14 apart from the acceleration channel 8. It is thereby possible to apply particularly high voltages to the high voltage electrode 12, something which results in a particularly high particle energy. In addition, the electrodes on the capacitor plates of the electrodes can be insulated from one another essentially apart from the acceleration channel 8 by the solid or liquid insulating material 14.
The high voltage on the high voltage electrode 12 is produced by means of a Greinacher cascade 20 that is illustrated as a circuit diagram in
This process is repeated in the diodes and capacitors following on thereupon, so that the voltage 6U is attained in total at the output 32 in the circuit illustrated in
The electrodes of two capacitors, respectively interconnected in
A spherical capacitor with an inner radius r0 and outer radius r1 has the capacitance of
The field strength for radius r is then
This field strength is quadratically dependent on the radius and therefore increases sharply toward the inner electrode.
Owing to the fact that the electrodes of the capacitors of the Greinacher cascade 20 are inserted in the cascade accelerator 1 as intermediate electrodes at a clearly defined potential, the field strength distribution is linearly equalized over the radius, since for thin-walled hollow spheres the electric field strength is approximately equal to the flat case of
with a minimum maximum field strength.
A particularly high acceleration voltage is achieved in a cascade accelerator 1 by the additional use of the two capacitor sets 2, 4 of a Greinacher cascade 20 as concentric potential equilibration electrodes for the electric field distribution in a high voltage electrode 12, essentially completely encapsulated in a solid or liquid insulating material 14. At the same time, the design is very compact, and this enables flexible application, particularly in beam therapy.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 023 305.9 | May 2009 | DE | national |
This application is a U.S. National Stage Application of International Application No. PCT/EP2010/054021 filed Mar. 26, 2010, which designates the United States of America, and claims priority to German Application No. 10 2009 023 305.9 filed May 29, 2009. The contents of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/054021 | 3/26/2010 | WO | 00 | 11/29/2011 |