Aspects of this disclosure relate to a standing-wave linear accelerator, and more particularly, to a compact standing-wave linear accelerator structure using a combination of on-axis accelerating cavities and side-coupled cavities and which omits a prebuncher and buncher cavities while retaining the prebuncher and buncher functions.
Microwave linear accelerators have found widespread medical and industrial applications. Linear accelerators take a beam of electrons injected from an electron gun and use an electromagnetic field applied to a string of cavity resonators coupled together axially in series along the beam axis (that is, along the longitudinal axis of the accelerator structure) to accelerate the injected electrons to nearly the speed of light.
Accelerators are of two basic types: Traveling-wave and standing-wave. Traveling-wave accelerators use traveling wave fields to accelerate the electrons, with the electromagnetic wave moving in one direction through the structure and an electron bunch travelling with it. In contrast, standing-wave accelerators have both ends shorted so that the electromagnetic power is reflected back and forth within the structure to create a standing wave that accelerates the electron bunch forward.
In general, traveling-wave accelerators are more widely used in research fields due to their simpler structure, less stringent construction tolerances, and relative insensitivity to energy variations. By contrast, standing-wave accelerators are usually more suitable for medical and industrial applications due to their shorter length, higher efficiency, and greater beam stability under temperature variations.
Both types of accelerators often make use of a prebuncher (or re-entrant) cavity into which the electron gun injects electrons, positioned next to the gun and immediately downstream from it, followed by a drift space. If a prebuncher cavity is not used, many of the injected electrons are accelerated backward towards the electron gun and often destroy the electron gun cathode. This effect is often called back heating of the electron gun. The microwave electric field in the prebuncher cavity alternately accelerates some electrons and decelerates others, depending on the phase of the applied microwave energy. The effect is to bunch the electrons together as these pass through the prebuncher cavity and drift space. Tight bunching of the electrons provides the optimal beam characteristics and offers a tight electron energy spectrum as well as the efficient stable operation needed for compact accelerator applications in particular.
A limiting factor is that the device size limits the locations where an accelerator can be used, particularly those employing side-coupled cavities. This limitation is especially critical in medical and industrial applications, where space maybe limited.
In addition, a problem with conventional linear accelerator structures is an inefficient rate of electron capture, with a consequent heavy back-bombardment of uncaptured electrons and significant damage to the electron gun as a result.
Embodiments of the present disclosure described herein provide a novel compact standing-wave accelerator that eliminates the prebuncher cavity and uses a buncher cavity, a very thin pancake cavity, and a first main accelerator cavity to function as a prebuncher and buncher, thereby providing a more compact accelerator having a very short length of 30 cm or less.
More specifically, embodiments of the present disclosure combine the buncher cavity with the first of the accelerator cavities via a pancake cavity in a single structure that omits the prebuncher and obviates the need for to side-coupled cavity at that part of the accelerator. .
According to embodiments of the present disclosure, a standing-wave linear accelerator structure includes an electron gun; a first cavity; a pancake cavity disposed adjacent to the electron gun on a side of the first cavity opposite the electrode gun, the first cavity and the pancake cavity together functioning as an electron buncher; and a plurality of accelerating cavities including both on-axis coupled cavities and side-coupled cavities, disposed serially after the at least one pancake cavity, configured to accelerate electrons injected from the electron gun through a central aperture formed in each of the on-axis cavities. The accelerator structure of this embodiment omits the prebuncher and buncher cavities while retaining their functions. As a result, the overall accelerator length is shortened.
In addition, the reduced electromagnetic field results in very tight and efficient electron bunching and capturing, and offers a very tight spectrum of the resultant accelerated electrons, while minimizing the electron back-bombardment and providing protection for the electron gun, thereby extending the working life of the electron gun.
A more complete appreciation of the disclosure and many of the attendant advantages thereof may be obtained as the same becomes better understood by reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
The accompanying drawings are intended to depict embodiments of the present disclosure and should not be interpreted to limit the scope thereof. The accompanying drawings are not to be considered as drawn to scale unless explicitly noted. In addition, identical or similar reference numerals designate identical or similar components throughout the several views.
One or more embodiments of the present disclosure are described below with reference to the drawings. It is to be noted that although certain specific terminology is employed for the sake of clarity, the present disclosure is not limited to the terminology so selected and it is to be understood that each specific element includes all technical equivalents that have a similar function, operate in a similar manner, and achieve a similar result. As used herein, the singular forms “a”, “an”, and “the” are intended to include the plural forms as well, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
This side-coupled configuration eliminates the need for a long travelling wave accelerator or bend magnet, and permits use of an extremely short in-line (on-axis) accelerator, but at the cost of requiring substantial radial space. For context,
The standard side-coupled standing-wave accelerator structure 100 is relatively simple, insofar as all the cavities with the exception of the first cavity 3 are the same length and therefore the intensity of the electric field applied is the same from the first cavity through the last, over the entire length of the accelerator. This simplicity of structure, however, has a cost in a lack of efficiency in capturing (bunching) the electrons, with a consequent heavy back-bombardment of uncaptured electrons as a result, in the form of high-energy X-rays directed away from the target. At the same time, the structure will not provide tight bunching of electrons at the end of the accelerator, and as a result, the output beam spectrum will not be sharp enough.
Back-bombardment degrades the electron gun and produces high temperatures of some 2,000° C., necessitating some sort of protection for both the operator and the gun, of which the latter must then be replaced frequently.
For this reason an electron prebuncher cavity may be used in order to increase electron capture and bunching efficiency (see, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 6,316,876 B1). Such a structure is illustrated in
Although an on-axis structure is less efficient than a side-coupled structure, this loss in efficiency is offset in part by using them only for injecting the electrons and bunching them together, with little acceleration. Moreover, this hybrid structure combining on-axis cavities with side-coupled cavities requires less longitudinal (axial) space because the side cavities must be spaced two on-axis cavities apart. Eliminating a side-coupling cavity thus allows the accelerator to be made shorter than a conventional side-coupled accelerator structure.
In the accelerator 200 illustrated in
A disk-shaped coupling cavity 17 (also called a pancake cavity) that couples the first cavity 16 with the adjacent accelerator cavity 18 has no accelerating field, thereby allowing the electrons accelerated by the microwave electric field in the first cavity 16 to further bunch together and then be injected into the first main accelerator cavity 18. Optimal electron acceleration characteristics are obtained with appropriate gun voltage (approximately 25 kV), drift distance (approximately 16 mm), and modulating power (approximately 5 kW).
Conventionally, the average electromagnetic field required to accelerate the electrons is approximately 20 MV/m. However, by adopting a structure in which the prebuncher and buncher cavities are eliminated but their functions retained using a different structure combining a first low-acceleration cavity, a thin pancake cavity, and a first main accelerator cavity, the electrons can be injected directly into the first low-acceleration cavity. This arrangement enables the accelerator device length to be kept relatively short for a more compact structure. This benefit is particular helpful in medical applications, where space may be limited. Such a structure and its effects are illustrated in
This embodiment of the present disclosure omits a prebuncher (re-entrant) cavity. Instead, the function of bunching the electrons, which would ordinarily be performed by the prebuncher, is carried out in the first pancake-like cavity 316, which, in the present embodiment, is coupled to the single adjacent thin pancake cavity 317 through aperture 320 as shown in
That is, the pancake cavity 317 is connected electrically to the adjacent first cavity 316 through aperture 320 upstream, and is connected downstream electrically to the first of the main accelerator cavities 318 through aperture 321, again as shown in
In the present embodiment, the coupling between the first cavity 316 and the first of the main accelerator cavities 318 is accomplished using the central apertures 320 and 321 as described above With the central apertures, the accelerating field in the cavities can be varied by giving the apertures different diameters
Note that, as illustrated in
With the present embodiment, the beam current accelerated by the accelerator can be as high as approximately 300-350 mA, compared to approximately 100-150 mA for conventional accelerators, assuming a 600 mA electron-injection current from the electron gun, thereby providing an electron capture rate/efficiency of approximately 50-58% compared to about 15-25% for the conventional accelerator. As a result, back-bombardment that damages the electron gun is significantly reduced. Moreover, even those electrons that do backfire are fewer in number than and not as high-energy as is the case conventionally, again limiting damage to the electron gun. In addition, elimination of the prebuncher cavity and separate power feed line and removal of the side-coupled cavity nearest the electron gun simplifies the structure and allows the accelerator device to be shortened by some 3 cm.
The electron gun of the present disclosure requires only about 20 kV of pulsed voltage, somewhat less than the approximately 25 kV typical of conventional accelerators. Thus, in conjunction with the dimensions of the cavities, the intensity of the rf energy accelerating field is about 20 MV/m. The overall length of the accelerator is not particularly limited, but given its assumed medical application, is about 30 cm or less, and at most not more than about 1 m. The average accelerating electron energy will thus be approximately 6 MeV to 20 MeV.
It should be noted that the larger the total length of the accelerator the greater the energy generated, and the greater the need for multiple accelerator main cavities.
Additional modifications and variations of the above-described embodiment are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, this disclosure may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.