This application claims priority to European Patent Application No. 11153703.1, filed Feb. 8, 2011, and is incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates to single-ended electrostatic DC linear particle accelerators. Such accelerators are well known and have been commercially available for more than 50 years to generate MeV electrons and ions. The ease with which the particle energy can be varied over a large range covering several tens of keV up to several tens of MeV, its unparalleled sharp energy definition and beam quality and their relative simple operating principle are the main reasons for their continuing widespread use today. The early accelerators were built in vessels that contained a pressurized gas to isolate the high voltage DC potential. A moving belt continuously transports charge that is sprayed onto its surface towards the terminal, thereby maintaining it at a high voltage potential. These belt driven DC linear electrostatic accelerators are named after their inventor, R. J. Van de Graaff and have limited current capability of typically less than ˜1 mA.
The beam current capability of the MeV DC linear accelerators was increased by several mA by changing the mechanical belt-driven high-voltage power supply by an electronic power supply. Probably the most successful example of such a pure electronic power supply that is applied for megavolt DC linear accelerators is the so-called Dynamitron power supply. Dynamitron-type power supplies are often referred to as parallel-coupled multiplier cascades to indicate their resemblance with today's standard and widespread approach of generating high voltage by serial-coupled multiplier cascades. In conjunction with accelerators serial-coupled multiplier cascaded high-voltage power supplies are often referred to as Cockroft-Walton type power supplies after their inventors J. D. Cockcroft and E. T. S. Walton.
In the case of electron accelerators the ongoing developments of Dynamitrons led to very powerful and high-current machines. Today many Dynamitron-based electron accelerators routinely provide electron beam intensities of several tens of mA and beam powers in excess of 100 kW to serve diverse industrial applications.
In spite of the growing demand by various applications and substantial effort, early high expectations that the availability of high-current DC power supplies and high-intensity ion sources would lead to the availability of several MeV ion beams at tens of mA intensity, never really matured. Examples of these applications include research in astrophysics and cancer therapy. Today, there is an even broader range of applications that would benefit from high-intensity ion beams of H, D or He, including cancer therapy, of which BNCT may be the best example, cyclotron injection, silicon cleaving for e.g. solar cell production, ion implantation in semiconductor devices and NRA for e.g. the detection of explosives.
In short, the reason that the progress in increasing beam current came to a halt can be explained as follows. The increase in primary beam current from the ion source inevitably resulted in the release of more neutral gas from these sources. The neutral gas from the ion source will increase the vacuum pressure inside the acceleration tube that accelerates the primary ion beam. Inside this acceleration tube the interaction of the primary ion beam with neutral gas atoms or molecules will result in several undesirable effects.
First of all, ionization of the neutral gas creates charged particles (ions and electrons) within the acceleration tube and these charged particles will be accelerated by the electrostatic field in the tube. The charged particles in turn will end up on the electrodes of the tube which will upset its field distribution. This in turn will affect the stability and voltage holding capability of the acceleration tube, possibly resulting in a full breakdown of the high voltage.
Secondly, scattering of primary particles on the neutral gas atoms will change their direction within the acceleration tube so that a part of the primary ions will end up on the electrodes of the acceleration tube. This is a second contribution to the reduced voltage holding capability of the acceleration tube.
These obstacles that were limiting the beam current capability are long understood and well described. See for example: US application # US 2010/0033115 and references therein.
Further references are:
The understanding of the physical phenomena that hampered the increase of ion beam current motivated the design of new accelerators that addressed the underlying problems. These designs include the incorporation of a vacuum pump and a vacuum restriction in the high-voltage terminal, mass analysis before acceleration to ensure that only the ions of interest are accelerated and the application of ion sources with high ionization efficiency to optimize the ratio between the primary ion beam current and the release of neutral gas. There are many examples of DC linear accelerators that are equipped with a vacuum pump and mass analysis inside the high-voltage terminal, see e.g.: B. Cleff, W.-H. Schulte, H. Schulze, W. Terlau, R. Koudijs, P. Dubbelman and H. J. Peters, A new 2 MV single-ended ion accelerator for ion implantation, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. in Phys. Res. B6 (1985) 46-50 and the earlier mentioned US application.
Apart from reasons with regard to technical functionality, it is a practical shortcoming of a configuration that has a vacuum pump in the terminal in that it requires periodic regeneration of the accumulated gas, which is time-consuming and results in system downtime.
In spite of the efforts described above, a clear breakthrough towards currents of tens of mA has not been convincingly demonstrated. Such a breakthrough would widen the field of applications for DC linear accelerators in many directions that are mentioned before. As an example, the availability of a 2-3 MeV proton accelerator system with a beam current capability of roughly 20 mA would pave the road towards the clinical application of Boron Neutron Capture Therapy (BNCT) since such high beam current brings the duration of the treatment within acceptable limits. It is believed that the reduction of the vacuum pressure inside the acceleration tube is the key towards higher currents.
A high-current (more than 5 mA) accelerator system is provided in which the gas that is inevitably released from the high-current ion source is efficiently pumped before it can flow into the acceleration tube. The resulting low vacuum pressure inside this acceleration tube supports high-current beams to be accelerated.
The need for regular and time-consuming regeneration of the vacuum pump in the terminal is circumvented in order to minimize system downtime.
A DC single-ended linear accelerator that may be powered from a Dynamitron-type power supply capable of producing MeV ion beams in excess of 5 mA is disclosed. For this, a ion source to generate the primary ion beam is located in its high-voltage terminal. Suitable ion sources should have low maintenance and long lifetime since servicing of the ion source requires a time-consuming tank opening and causes accelerator downtime. Sources that are well known and widely available may include Duoplasmatrons, microwave or ECR ion sources. The high-voltage terminal further comprises a vacuum enclosure in which the high-current ion beam from the ion source is transported towards the accelerating tube and which houses a mass-analyzer to remove unwanted contaminants from the primary ion beam. The mass-analyzer may be configured such that it also acts like a lens that focuses the divergent beam emerging from the ion source to become convergent. In this way a beam focus or “waist” is created after mass analysis. The mass-analyzer may be a 90 deg dipole magnet with appropriately shaped magnet poles to provide the required focusing. This arrangement allows that a vacuum restriction in the form of a plate or a wall with a small sized aperture is placed at the position of the beam focus. The aperture allows passage of the mass analyzed ion beam towards the acceleration tube and at the same time blocks the neutral gas from entering into the acceleration tube. Connected in between the vacuum enclosure in the high voltage terminal and the vacuum pump at ground potential is a separate pumping tube that can withstand the full accelerator high voltage. The neutral gas from the ion source can flow via the vacuum enclosure through the pumping tube towards ground potential where it is further removed from the system by a vacuum pump.
These and other features and advantages will be discussed in more detail hereafter with reference to the drawings, wherein like parts are numbered alike in the various figures. The figures are intended to illustrate an exemplary embodiment but are in no way intended to limit the scope of the present invention, in which:
Although attractive from a vacuum point of view, it is readily recognized by those skilled in the art that the configuration of
In addition to this, the vacuum pump that is located in the high-voltage terminal will have to store the gas that it collects. As a consequence and regardless of the selected type of pump, it requires periodic regeneration of the accumulated gas, which is time-consuming and results in system downtime.
A steel vessel 1 contains insulating gas at a pressure of several bars and further comprises an accelerating column 2, an accelerating tube 3 and a terminal 4 that is maintained at a high voltage of up to several MV by a high voltage power supply. In this example the high voltage is generated by a Dynamitron-type power supply, that is the power supply of the preferred embodiment, but alternatives including Cockroft-Walton and magnetically-coupled high-voltage DC power supplies are possible. The operating principle of the Dynamitron-type power supply can be concisely described as follows: Two dynodes 14 that have a semi-cylindrical shape are excited by a sinusoidal RF voltage of typically 20-200 kV. The RF voltage is capacitively coupled to crescent shaped corona rings 15. Rectifier assemblies 16 are placed between opposing corona ring 15 and are connected in series to create an essentially DC high voltage that increases linearly along the length of the accelerator column 2 in the direction of the high-voltage terminal. This type of power supply is widely applied and its technological details are well understood. It has been commercially available from several different manufactures for many decades. See for example: A. Gottdang, D. J. W. Mous and R. G. Haitsma, The novel HVEE 5 MV Tandetron™, Nucl. Instr. and Meth. in Phys. Res. B 190 2002 177-182 and the earlier mentioned US application and references therein.
Referring to
Several issues have to be taken into account to make the design successful.
Firstly, it is readily recognized by those skilled in the art that the high-current at least 5 mA ion beam 7 that is required mandates that space charge compensation be maintained during the transport of the ion beam 7 from the ion source 6 to the entrance of the acceleration tube 3. Space charge compensation cancels the repulsive forces between positive ions in the beam by allowing negative electrons to populate the beam envelope where they compensate the charge of the ion beam. This in turn reduces the repulsive forces. Cancelation of these repulsive forces prevents blow-up of the beam and is therefore beneficial for efficient beam transport. Preservation of space charge compensation is increasingly important at higher beam currents. It is known to those skilled in the art that space charge compensation excludes the use of electrostatic components like Einzellenses and ExB mass-analyzers.
Secondly, the vacuum restriction 12 that is located between the ion source 6 and the entrance of the acceleration tube 3 and that is in the form of a plate or wall which has an aperture or orifice to allow passage of the ion beam, is effective in minimizing the amount of gas that flows into the acceleration tube 3. This is achieved when the aperture or orifice has a small area, but is optimally achieved when the vacuum restriction 12 is in the form of a small diameter tube, as shown in
In the preferred embodiment the requirements of a configuration that supports space charge compensated beam transport and a small beamsize at the position of the vacuum restriction 12 for efficient blocking of the gas is achieved by a strong focusing magnet dipole 19. It is well understood that by a proper choice and design of the radius, index, bending angle and geometry of the magnet poles, the analyzing dipole magnet 19 will be able to focus the beam and to create a small sized beam at the position of the vacuum restriction 12.
It is readily recognized by those skilled in the art that a relative small bending angle of e.g. 30° may be sufficient to meet the requirements for mass analysis, but that a substantially larger bending may be required to achieve the needed strong focusing action because the focal power of a bending magnet increases with its bending angle. As a result, the bending angle of the magnet according to the preferred embodiment of the invention is at least 45°, but optimally it 90°, as shown in
An alternative configuration that may be applied is given in
In the accelerator, pumping of the neutral gas from the ion source 6 has a special arrangement. Instead of mounting the vacuum pump directly on the vacuum enclosure 8 in the high-voltage terminal 4, which is characteristic for prior art, a dedicated pumping tube 17 is positioned in between the ion source 6 at high voltage and the vacuum pump 18 at, or close to, ground potential, as shown in
It is another advantage that a greater freedom of choice is obtained with regard to the dimensions and the type of vacuum pump to be used, because usually more space is available for such an externally mounted pump and the pump does not need to operate in a pressurized environment. In addition, regeneration of the vacuum pump, which would result in system downtime, is no longer needed.
In the preferred embodiment of
There will be various modifications, adjustments, and applications of the disclosed invention that will be apparent to those of skill in the art, and the present application is intended to cover such embodiments. Accordingly, while the present invention has been described in the context of certain preferred embodiments, it is intended that the full scope of these be measured by reference to the scope of the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120256564 A1 | Oct 2012 | US |