1. Field of the Invention
The present invention generally relates to a reduced size high frequency quadrupole for accelerating ions in a neutralized ion beam.
2. Description of the Background Art
Radio frequency quadrupoles (RFQs) have been used for the confinement and acceleration of ion particles for many years. RFQs generally consist of four elongated electrode rods surrounding a central axis through which an ion beam passes. The electrodes are driven by an oscillating voltage to produce an electromagnetic field. Such radio frequencies produced can be any periodic, time varying waves such as, UHF or microwaves. When the frequencies are applied, rods opposite one another assume opposite charges thereby establishing an electric field having a certain direction between the electrode rods.
Transverse confinement of positive and negative ions occurs when the RFQ structures are in a cylindrical geometry. When the periodic, time varying voltage is applied between the pairs of quadrupole rods, particles having charge-to-mass ratios in a certain range (dictated by the quadrupole dimensions, driving voltage, and driving frequency) are confined transversely while remaining free to move longitudinally. This principle is employed in quadrupole mass spectrometry. The confinement occurs regardless of the sign of the particle charge.
Acceleration of the particles in the longitudinal direction is produced by perturbing the shape of the surface of the quadrupole rods facing the central axis. When using a microwave frequency quadrupole (MFQ), a sinusoidal scallop is added along the axis of the vanes or electrodes. While maintaining the radial trapping, this structure imposes a longitudinal traveling wave that moves down the axis at a speed governed by the driving frequency and scallop wavelength. Particles are trapped in bunches by the wave, and are accelerated as the scallop wavelength increases. So far, MFQs have been used only to accelerate single species of particles.
When positive and negative ions of the same charge-to-mass ratio are combined in a beam in equal proportions, the beam has overall charge neutrality, and is called a “neutralized ion beam.” Neutralized ion beams will avoid charging the target; a charged target can cause repulsion of the incident ion beam, thereby requiring higher and higher energies of the incident beam for penetration. Unlike in an ion-electron neutralized beam, the positive and negative species of a neutralized ion beam respond symmetrically to electric and magnetic forces. This property lends itself to a range of applications, including fusion energy research, plasma processing, and ion propulsion, as well as to the acceleration of the beam itself. Currently, fusion devices employ neutral beam injectors that are very large in size and/or cannot efficiently produce MeV beams. What is needed is a reduced size compact and efficient RFQ which provides a neutralized ion beam of high energy.
One embodiment of the invention is a high frequency quadrupole apparatus with an even number of elongated electrodes, preferably four, arranged around a central axis to form a quadrupole. An ion source injects a positive ion beam and a negative ion beam into the quadrupole. A power source drives the electrodes with a time-varying periodic voltage to induce an electromagnetic field. In the preferred embodiments, the field will be a microwave field. The quadrupole will be divided into several sections, with a buncher section located at the beginning of the quadrupole, an acceleration section posterior to the buncher section and furthermore, a neutralizer section posterior to the acceleration section. For acceleration of the bunched particles, the buncher section and acceleration section have a scallop with a specified wavelength, and will preferably be sinusoidal. Furthermore, the quadrupole will be miniaturized to the dimension of submillimeters allowing for a high (e.g., radio) frequency wave. By such an apparatus and method according to the current invention, a reduced size RFQ can bunch and accelerate ions of different signs to achieve a neutralized ion beam of high energy.
a is a graphic representation of beam particle distribution at the beginning of the buncher section of the MFQ;
b is a graphic representation of beam particle distribution at the middle of the accelerator section of the MFQ;
c is a graphic representation of beam particle distribution at the neutralizer section;
While the present invention may be embodied in many different forms, a number of illustrative embodiments are described herein with the understanding that the present disclosure is to be considered as providing examples of the principles of the invention and such examples are not intended to limit the invention to preferred embodiments described herein and/or illustrated herein.
MFQs utilize wave-particle interaction to accelerate particles, and can simultaneously accelerate positive ion bunches (in wave troughs) and negative ion bunches (in wave crests). After acceleration, the longitudinal field in the MFQ can be relaxed (while maintaining transverse confinement), allowing the ion bunches to mix and form a neutralized ion beam. The driving field (E) is made to travel in phase for a sustained duration with ions that are being accelerated.
This can be accomplished by use of a specific design structure driven by a time varying field regulated by control software programming. This method of acceleration can be compared to a surfer riding on an ocean wave. The surfer, or particle, can gain velocity for a long duration when the wave moves slightly ahead of the surfer. This wave-particle coupling technique obviates the need for a high voltage as used in a conventional ion source.
The apparatus and method according to the invention produces high current density, low emittance beams, with energies ranging from very low ( less than 1 ev) to the MeV range, by using a range of frequencies from KHz to multi-GHz. In a preferred embodiment, microwaves are used, however, in principle all frequencies can be used.
Theoretical studies of MFQs have shown that scaling favors a reduction in size, as shown by the stability criterion, Q=2, where Q, the quality factor, =4 qVocs/Mω2 ro2, where Vocs is the voltage, q is the charge of the ion, M is the ion mass, ω is the imposed frequency, and ro is the aperture size. As the aperture size decreases, if everything else is kept constant, the imposed frequency must increase to satisfy the above criterion. A high frequency drive requires a smaller resonant cavity which is consistent with miniaturized or reduced size RFQ.
In the laboratory an RFQ has been used to accelerate ions of both signs axially, while confining them radially by the same high frequency field at UHF frequencies. Each tiny module is sized in dimensions of submillimeters. As a result of the small dimension the oscillating electric field is high for even modest imposed voltages. MFQs can accelerate ions over a relatively small distance to many times the initial velocity of ion and neutrals. High frequency is being used for this purpose. The oscillating field, E, can be very high even for modest voltages if the dimension is the scale of microns. The current can be increased by multiplying the number of modules. This phenomenon is demonstrated by looking at the equation νv=vo2+2aS, where ν is the final velocity, vo is the initial velocity, a is the acceleration, and S is the length of the accelerator. The acceleration “a” is also equal to qE/m where E=V/ro. Because the initial velocity vo is small, v2≅2qVS/mro or mv2/2=qVS/ro. With all other factors held constant, the smaller ro is, the greater is the final velocity of the ion. This leads to the reduced miniaturized size of the RFQ of the current invention.
One embodiment of an MFQ according to the invention is displayed in
a and 2b are beam particle distribution graphs corresponding to, respectively, the beginning of the buncher section 4 and the middle of the accelerator section 5 of the MFQ as shown in
The MFQ can be miniaturized through special fabrication techniques using micro-machining followed by vapor deposition to provide a metallic coating to the cavity. It also utilizes the accurate alignment capability of nanotechnology fabrication, making it possible to achieve tolerances of 50 microns, 0.1 microns or better.
Simulation 1
As also demonstrated by
In the simulation, a DC beam of 10 mA D+ and a DC beam of 10 mA D− are injected at 100 keV into a 500 MHz MFQ and are accelerated to 1 MeV (currents are given as absolute magnitudes). The beams enter an MFQ as in
Simulation 2
Space-charge forces oppose the transverse confinement and longitudinal bunching of the particles in the MFQ. This imposes “transverse” and “longitudinal” current density limits on the MFQ beam. For a given frequency, the MFQ aperture size and applied voltage can be optimized such that the beam current density is maximized. The current density limit theory indicates that, as the frequency is increased, the maximum current density increases, and the optimal aperture size and voltage decrease. These predictions are confirmed by PARMTEQ runs.
Theory and simulation show that a compact MFQ driven at high frequency can accelerate a high current density beam. In this example a small MFQ of aperture radius −0.75 mm and length 15 cm, is used and displayed in
With these parameters, the MFQ accelerates H+ or H− ions from 350 eV to 7 keV. A block diagram of the system is shown in
The simulation results presented here confirm the expected ability of an MFQ to accelerate positive and negative ions simultaneously. The transverse confinement maintained by the MFQ after acceleration allows the beam species to de-bunch and mix, yielding an energetic neutralized ion beam.
It has been demonstrated both in theory and experiment that a neutralized ion-electron beam may propagate across a transverse magnetic field if the beam is sufficiently energetic and dense (the effect is depicted in
where ωi and Ωi are the ion plasma and cyclotron frequencies, M is the ion mass, and m is the electron mass. For a neutralized ion beam of the type discussed here, the electron mass is replaced by the negative ion mass. The effect is to significantly lower the required beam density for propagation. It may therefore be advantageous to use neutralized ion beams in applications that require cross-field propagation, such as injection into fusion devices.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60744380 | Apr 2006 | US |