Claims
- 1. In a method of operating a duopigatron ion source comprising the steps of producing a glow discharge from a feed gas within the intermediate electrode thereof by an oxide-coated wire filament cathode to thereby produce a weak plasma, producing a PIG-type arc discharge between a cylindrical anode and a target cathode from said weak plasma exiting from said intermediate electrode thereby enhancing the plasma density, and extracting ions from said enhanced plasma by means of a multiple-aperture acceleration-deceleration electrode structure, the improvement comprising the steps of replacing said oxide-coated wire filament cathode with a cylindrical tungsten oven cathode, heating said oven cathode with a source of electrical supply to a desired temperature, passing said feed gas through said heated oven cathode where it is substantially pre dissociated within said oven cathode before passing therefrom, said heated oven cathode also supplying thermionic electrons for sustaining said PIG-type arc discharge, and placing tungsten liners on the inside walls of said intermediate electrode, of said anode, and of said target cathode, said liner of said intermediate electrode being heated by thermal radiation from said heated oven cathode, said liners of said anode and target cathode being heated by said arc discharge, thereby effecting a substantial increase in the atomic ion fraction and a corresponding decrease in the molecular ion fractions in the output beam from said ion source.
- 2. The method set forth in claim 1, wherein said oven cathode is maintained at a temperature of at least 2400.degree. K. by said electrical supply.
- 3. The method set forth in claim 2, wherein said feed ga is selected from the group consisting essentially of hydrogen, deuterium and tritium.
- 4. An improved duopigatron ion source comprising an elongated, cylindrical, electron emitting tungsten cathode; a tungsten rod extending coaxially within said cathode and electrically joined at one of its ends with the exit end of said cathode; a source of feed gas adapted to be passed through said cylindrical cathode; a first power supply coupled between the other end of said rod and cathode to supply heating current thereto and provide thermionic electrons therefrom; said cathode serving as an oven for dissociating said feed gas as it passes through said oven cathode and supplying said electrons; a cylindrical intermediate electrode spaced from and encompassing said cathode and provided with an apertured, tapered lower end portion; a source magnet encompassing the upper portion of said intermediate electrode and adapted to be connected to a second magnet supply source; a cylindrical copper anode spaced and insulated from said intermediate electrode; an elongated cylindrical target cathode spaced and insulated from said anode; said target cathode provided with a multi-apertured closure member at the lower end thereof; a multi-apertured extraction electrode mounted beyond and closely spaced from said target cathode closure member; a multi-apertured acceleration electrode mounted beyond and closely spaced from said acceleration electrode; a multi-apertured deceleration electrode mounted beyond and closely spaced from said acceleration electrode; a third arc power supply source coupled between said cathode and said intermediate electrode, between said cathode and said anode, and between said cathode and said target cathode; a fourth power supply source coupled to said extraction electrode; a fifth power supply source coupled to said acceleration electrode, said deceleration electrode being connected to ground; a first tungsten liner mounted on the inside wall of said intermediate electrode; a second tungsten liner mounted on the inside wall of said anode; and a third tungsten cup-like liner mounted on the inside walls of the lower portion of said target cathode and a portion of said target cathode closure member, whereby during operation of said ion source the dissociation of said feed gas effected by said oven cathode plus the hot wall environment provided by said respective liners effects a substantial increase in the atomic ion fraction and a corresponding decrease in the molecular ion fractions in the output beam from said ion source.
- 5. The ion source set forth in claim 4, wherein said cylindrical oven cathode is maintained at a temperature of at least 2400.degree. K. by said first power supply.
- 6. The ion source set forth in claim 5, wherein said feed gas is selected from the group consisting essentially of hydrogen, deuterium and tritium.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention was made in the course of, or under, a contract with the U.S. Department of Energy.
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
3740554 |
Morgan |
Jun 1973 |
|
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
"A Low Current -- Ion Source" by Steinberg et al., The Review of Sci. Inst., vol. 42, No. 3, Mar. 1971, pp. 354, 355. |