Abstract
We hereby report a study on confinement and electron loss dynamics in the magnetic trap of an electron cyclotron resonance ion source using a special multi-diagnostic setup that has allowed ...the simultaneous collection of plasma radio-self-emission and x-ray images in the range 500 eV–20 keV. Argon plasmas were generated in single- and two-close-frequency heating (SFH and TCFH) modes. Evidence of turbulent regimes has been found: for stable and unstable configurations quantitative characterizations of the plasma radio self-emission have been carried out, then compared with local measurements of plasma energy content evaluated by x-ray imaging. This imaging method is the only one able to clearly separate x-ray radiation coming from the plasma from that coming from the plasma chamber walls. X-ray imaging has also been supported and benchmarked by volumetric spectroscopy performed via silicon drift and high-purity germanium detectors. The obtained results in terms of x-ray intensity signal coming from the plasma core and from the plasma chamber walls permit the estimation of the average ratio: plasma vs. walls (i.e. plasma losses) as a function of input RF power and pumping wave frequency, showing an evident increase (above the experimental errors) of the intensity in the 2–20 keV energy range due to the plasma losses in the case of unstable plasma. This ratio was well correlated with the strength of the instabilities, in SFH operation mode; in TCFH mode, under specific power balance conditions and frequency combinations, it was possible to damp the instabilities, and thus the plasma losses were observed to decrease and a general reconfiguration of the spatial plasma structure occurred (the x-ray emission was more concentrated in the center of the plasma chamber). Finally, a simplified model was used to simulate electron heating under different pumping frequencies, prompting discussion of the impact of velocity anisotropy vs the onset of the instability, and the mechanism of particle diffusion in the velocity space in stable and unstable regimes.
Abstract We present a numerical study of metals dynamics evaporated through resistively heated ovens in electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) plasma traps, used as metal ion beam injectors for ...accelerators and multi-disciplinary research in plasma physics. We use complementary numerical methods to perform calculations in the framework of the PANDORA trap. The diffusion and deposition of metal vapours at the plasma chamber’s surface are explored under molecular flow regime, with stationary and time-dependent particle fluid calculations via COMSOL Multiphysics®. The ionisation of vapours is then studied in the strongly energised ECR plasma. We have developed a Monte Carlo (MC) code to simulate the in-plasma metal ions’ dynamics, coupled to particle-in-cell simulations of the plasma physics in the trap. The presence of strongly inhomogeneous plasmas leads to charge-exchange and electron-impact ionisations of metals, in turn affecting the deposition rate/pattern of the metal on the walls of the trap. Results show how vapours dynamics depends both on evaporated metals and the plasma target. The 134 Cs, 176 Lu, and 48 Ca isotopes were investigated, the first two being radioisotopes interesting for the PANDORA project, and the third as one of the most required rare isotope by the nuclear physics community. We present an application of the study: MC computing the γ activity due to the deposited radioactive neutral nuclei during the measurement time, we quantitatively estimated the overall γ -detection system’s efficiency using GEANT4, including the poisoning γ -signal from the walls of the trap, relevant for the γ -tagging of short-lived nuclei’s decay rate in the PANDORA experiment. This work can give valuable support both to the evaporation technique and plasma source optimisation, for improving the metal ion beam production, avoiding huge deposit/waste of metals known to affect the long-term source stability, as well as for radio-safety aspects and reducing material waste in case of rare isotopes.
Experiments have recently demonstrated that kinetic instabilities occurring in magnetoplasma are huge limiting factors to the flux of highly charged ion beams extracted from ECR ion sources. ...Recently, it has been shown that the two-frequency-heating (TFH) mode has the proven potential to mitigate these instabilities. Since the fundamental physical mechanism of TFH is still unclear, a deeper experimental investigation is necessary. At ATOMKI-Debrecen, the effect on the kinetic instabilities of an argon plasma in a 'two-close-frequency heating' scheme has been explored for the first time by using a frequency gap smaller than 1 GHz (i.e. operating in the so-called two-closed-frequency heating mode). A special multi-diagnostics setup has been designed and implemented. In this paper, we will show the data collected by a two-pin, plasma-chamber immersed antenna connected to an RF detector diode and/or to a spectrum analyzer for the detection of plasma radio-self-emission when varying the pumping frequency in single versus double frequency heating mode. Data have been collected simultaneously to the beam extraction and for different frequency gaps and relative power balances. The turbulent regime of the plasma has been tentatively described in a quantitative way, according to the properties of the plasma self-emitted RF spectrum. The measurements show that plasma self-emitted radiation emerges from the internal ECR region everytime (i.e. below the lower pumping frequency) but the almost total instability damping can be effective for some specific combinations of frequency-gap and power balance, thus eventually improving the plasma confinement.
Abstract
In this paper we present the numerical design and simulation of RF antennas to be employed in Ion Cyclotron Resonance Heating (ICRH) systems working in ECRIS environment. A 3D full-wave ...numerical model, based on the coupling between COMSOL FEM solution of Maxwell equations and the MATLAB-computed non-homogeneous plasma dielectric tensor, has been employed in order to study the performances of several ICRH antennas. Results in terms of S-parameters, on-axis electric field and RF absorbed power inside the plasma chamber have been obtained and compared between the chosen antenna geometries. The presented study will permit to better understand the fundamental aspects of ion dynamics in ECRISs as well as allowing the design of a proper matching network between the RF amplifier and the antenna, necessary to cope with the plasma properties’ fast variations. Further ion kinetic simulations are ongoing.
The ion beam-plasma interaction is a relevant topic in several fields of plasma physics, from fusion devices to modern ion sources. This paper discusses the numerical modelling of the whole ...beam-plus-plasma-target system in case of 1+ ions entering an ECR-based charge breeder (ECR-CB). The model is able to reproduce the ion capture and the creation of the first charge states in the selected physics case, i.e. the interaction of a 85Rb1+ ions with the plasma of the 14.5 GHz PHOENIX ECR-CB installed at the Laboratoire de Physique Subatomique et de Cosmologie (LPSC) of Grenoble. The results show that a very narrow window of physical parameters for both the beam (energy and energy spread especially) and plasma (ion temperature, density, density structural distribution, self-generated ambipolar fields) exists which is able to reproduce very well the experimental results, providing an exhaustive picture of the involved phenomena. Possible non-linear interactions and the role played by the eventual onset of instabilities are also discussed.
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PANDORA, Plasmas for Astrophysics, Nuclear Decays Observation and Radiation for Archaeometry, is planned as a new facility based on a state-of-the-art plasma trap confining energetic plasma for ...performing interdisciplinary research in the fields of Nuclear Astrophysics, Astrophysics, Plasma Physics and Applications in Material Science and Archaeometry: the plasmas become the environment for measuring, for the first time, nuclear decay rates in stellar-like condition (such as
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Be decay and beta-decay involved in s-process nucleosynthesis), especially as a function of the ionization state of the plasma ions. These studies will give important contributions for addressing several astrophysical issues in both stellar and primordial nucleosynthesis environment (
e.g.
, determination of solar neutrino flux and
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Li Cosmological Problem), moreover the confined energetic plasma will be a unique light source for high-performance stellar spectroscopy measurements in the visible, UV and X-ray domains, offering advancements in observational astronomy. As to magnetic fields, the experimental validation of theoretical first- and second-order Landé factors will drive the layout of next-generation polarimetric units for the high-resolution spectrograph of the future giant telescopes. In PANDORA new plasma heating methods will be explored, that will push forward the ion beam output, in terms of extracted intensity and charge states. More, advanced and optimized injection methods of ions in an ECR plasma will be experimented, with the aim to optimize its capture efficiency. This will be applied to the ECR-based Charge Breeding technique, that will improve the performances of the SPES ISOL-facility at Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro-INFN. Finally, PANDORA will be suitable for energy conversion, making the plasma a source of high-intensity electromagnetic radiation, for applications in material science and archaeometry.
Abstract Metals can be injected into electron cyclotron resonance ion sources (ECRIS) via different techniques, among which resistive ovens are used to vaporize neutral materials, later captured by ...the energetic plasma that will step-wise ionize them, hence giving multiply charged ion beams for accelerators. Recently, PANDORA, a novel ECR plasma trap, has been conceived to perform interdisciplinary research spanning from nuclear physics to astrophysics, where in-plasma high charge states of metallic species are demanded. However, a full knowledge on the vaporization method and on the coupling of neutral atoms with plasma and its overall dynamics is still not available. Simulations, hence, are of fundamental relevance to improve the overall efficiency, reduce consumption of rare expensive isotopes, and to improve the ion source performance. We present a numerical study about metallic species suitable for oven injection in ECRIS, focusing on metals diffusion, transport, and wall deposition under molecular flow regime. We studied the metal dynamics with and without plasma. Results underline the plasma role on a space-dependent conversion yield, reflecting the strongly inhomogeneous ECR plasma. The plasma and its parameters have been modelled using an established self-consistent particle-in-cell model. The numerical tool is conceived for the PANDORA plasma trap but can be extended to other ECR plasmas and traps. As test cases we studied the 134 Cs and 48 Ca radioisotopes, as metals of interest for the modern nuclear physics. A focus is given on the β -decaying 134 Cs, as an application case for PANDORA, providing quantitative estimates of the γ-detection signal-poisoning effect by neutral metals deposition at the chamber wall.
Abstract An innovative ECR ion trap facility, called PANDORA (Plasma for Astrophysics, Nuclear Decay Observation and Radiation for Archaeometry), was designed for fundamental plasma processes and ...nuclear physics investigations. The overall structure consists of three subsystems: a) a large (70 cm in length, 28 cm in inner diameter) ECR plasma trap with a fully superconducting B-minimum magnetic system (B max = 3.0 T) and an innovative design to host detectors and diagnostic tools; b) an advanced non-invasive plasma multidiagnostics system to locally characterize the plasma thermodynamic properties; c) an array of 14 HPGe detectors. The PANDORA facility is conceived to measure, for the first time, in-plasma β -decaying isotope rates under stellar-like conditions. The experimental approach consists in a direct correlation of plasma parameters and nuclear activity by disentangling - by means of the multidiagnostic system that will work in synergy with the γ-ray array - the photons emitted by the plasma (from microwave to hard X-ray) and γ-rays emitted after the isotope β -decay. In addition to nuclear physics research, fundamental plasma physics studies can be conducted in this unconventional ion source equipped with tens of detection and diagnostic devices (RF polarimeter, optical emission spectroscopy (OES), X-ray imaging, space and time-resolved spectroscopy, RF probes, scope), with relevant implications for R&D of ion sources for accelerator physics and technology. Several studies have already been performed in downsized nowadays operating ECRIS. Stable and turbulent plasma regimes have been described quantitatively, studying the change of plasma morphology, confinement, and dynamics of losses using space resolved X-ray spectroscopy.