Perspective in polarized ion sources developments Vadim Dudnikov, Muons, Inc., Batavia, IL USA A Special Beam Physics Symposium in Honor of Yaroslav Derbenev’s 70th Birthday; Aug. 2 & 3, 2010 Muons, Inc. 1
Jan 09, 2016
Perspective in polarized ion sources developments
Vadim Dudnikov,
Muons, Inc., Batavia, IL USA
A Special Beam Physics Symposium in Honor of Yaroslav Derbenev’s 70th Birthday; Aug. 2 & 3, 2010
Muons, Inc.
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Budker Institute of Nuclear Physicswww.inp.nsk.su
Self-stabilization of e-p instability BNL V.Dudnikov
2 June 2006
G.I. Budker, founder and director of INP
Round table BINP
King Arthur Pub
Round table of BINP is the method of problems solving
Traditional Siberian folk’s handicrafts in BINP:
Electron cooling;
Siberian Snakes;
Negative ion sources;
Neutral Beam Injectors;
Superconducting wigglers;
Sources of Polarized particles:
Industrial accelerators;
Storage Rings;
Muons colliders…….The electron cooling force in a magnetized electronbeam with an anisotropic electron velocity distribution was derived by Derbenev and Skrinsky in 1978 [1].[1] Ya. S. Derbenev and A. N. Skrinskii, Magnetization effects in electron cooling, Sov. J. Plasma Phys. 4(3), May–June 1978, 273-278
HELICAL SIBERIAN SNAKES
There are several methods to reduce the depolarizingeffect of the resonance field harmonics, but the Siberian snaketechnique was demonstrated to be most effective in maintaining beam polarization. A snake is a configuration of magnets that, in the orbit frame, rotates the spin by 180o about an axis which lies in the horizontal plane. This proposal has been made byY.S.Derbenev and A.N.Kondratenko[1,2].
[1]. Ya.S.Derbenev and A.N.Kondratenko, Proceedings of 10-th International Conference on High Energy Accelerators, Protvino, USSR, 1977.[2] Ya.S.Derbenev and A.N.Kondratenko, Proc. Int. Conf. on High Energy Physics with Polarized Beams and Polarized Targets, Argonne, III, (1978), p. 292ff.
Slava in INP.
Slides of Siberian Snakes become best awards for VIPs
Workshop on high –energy spin physics, Protvino, IHEP, September,1983
Workshop on high –energy spin physics, Protvino, IHEP, September,1983
Ya.Derbenev- “Siberian snake”.
Requirements to the polarized source.
Requirements to the polarized source.
• High intensity ~ 5·1011 H-/pulse at 200 MeV after the Linac. At booster beam intensity acceptances are limited by about 1·1011 protons/bunch. The intensity excess can be used to reduce transversal and longitudinal beam emittances by a strong dynamical collimation in the Booster.
• Highest possible polarization is required to reduce a systematical and statistical errors in polarization experiments. Double spin asymmetry statistical error is proportional to ~ 1/sqrt(L P4), therefore a 5% polarization increase in the source (or 5% polarization losses decrease in booster and EIC is effectively equivalent to 30% increase in the data taking time.
• Beam intensity and polarization must be equal at spin-reversal and from pulse to pulse.
ΔI/I <10-3 and ΔP/P < 1% need be reached.
Motivation for high polarization
• We need particle sources with a highest polarization because polarization can be preserved during acceleration by Siberian Snake and by Figure-8 rings.
• Ion sources for production of polarized negative and positive light and heavy ions will be considered. Atomic bean ion source can be used for generation of polarized H-, H+, D-, D+ , He++, Li +++ ions with high polarization and high brightness.
• Generation of multicharged ions, injection and beam instabilities will be considered.
• References:• Belov A.S., Dudnikov V.,et. al., NIM A255, 442 (1987).• Belov A.S., Dudnikov V.,et al., . NIM A333, 256 (1993).• Belov A.S, Dudnikov V., et. al., RSI, 67, 1293 (1996).• Bel’chenko Yu. I. , Dudnikov V., et. al., RSI, 61, 378 (1990)• Belov A.S. et. al., NIM, A239, 443 (1985).• Belov A.S. et. al., 11 th International Conference on Ion Sources, Caen, France, September 12-16, 2005;
A.S. Belov, PSTP-2007, BNL, USA; A.S. Belov, DSPIN2009, DUBNA, Russia; • A. Zelenski, PSTP-2007, BNL, USA; DSPIN2009, DUBNA, Russia
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EIC Design Goals Energy
• Center-of-mass energy between 20 GeV and 90 GeV• energy asymmetry of ~ 10,
3 GeV electron on 30 GeV proton/15 GeV/n ion up to 9 GeV electron on 225 GeV proton/100 GeV/n ion
Luminosity • 1033 up to 1035 cm-2 s-1 per interaction point
Ion Species• Polarized H, D, 3He, possibly Li• Up to heavy ion A = 208, all striped
Polarization• Longitudinal polarization at the IP for both beams • Transverse polarization of ions• Spin-flip of both beams• All polarizations >70% desirable
Positron Beam desirable
Muons, Inc.
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Yuhong ZhangFor the ELIC Study Group
Jefferson Lab
ELIC (e/A) Design Parameters
Ion Max Energy
(Ei,max)
Luminosity / n
(7 GeV x Ei,max)
Luminosity / n
(3 GeV x Ei,max/5)
(GeV/nucleon) 1034 cm-2 s-1 1033 cm-2 s-1
Proton 150 7.8 6.7
Deuteron 75 7.8 6.73H+1 50 7.8 6.7
3He+2 100 3.9 3.34He+2 75 3.9 3.312C+6 75 1.3 1.1
40Ca+20 75 0.4 0.4208Pb+82 59 0.1 0.1
* Luminosity is given per unclean per IP
Existing Sources ParametersUniversal Atomic Beam Polarized Sources (most promising,
less expensive for repeating):• IUCF/INR CIPIOS: Pulse Width Up to 0.5 ms (Shutdown
8/02); Peak Intensity H-/D- 2.0 mA/2.2 mA; Max Pz/Pzz 85% to
95%; Emittance (90%) 1.2 π·mm·mrad.• INR Moscow: Pulse Width > 0.1 ms (Test Bed since 1984); Peak Intensity H+/H- 11 mA/4 mA; Max Pz 80%/95%; Emittance (90)% 1.0 π·mm·mrad/ 1.8 π·mm·mrad; Unpolarized H-/D- 150/60 mA.
OPPIS/BNL: H- only; Pulse Width 0.5 ms (in operation); Peak Intensity >1.6 mA; Max Pz 85% of nominal Emittance (90%) 2.0 π·mm·mrad.
Muons, Inc.
First polarized-proton sources described at theINTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON POLARIZATION
PHENOMENA OF NUCLEONSBasel, July 1960
Sources of Polarized Ions a review of early work
SOURCES OF POLARIZED IONSBY W. HAEBERLI
ANNUAL REVIEW OF NUCLEAR SCIENCE Vol. 17, 1967
The status 40 years ago:
W. Haeberli, PSTP-2007, BNL, USA
Method based on 1968 proposal (NIM 62 p. 335)
= 22x10-16cm2 at 2keV -> 100x10-16cm2 at 10eV
A.S. Belov et al. (INR-Moscow) - 20 yrs development workIntense beam of unpolarized D- fromdeuterium surface-plasma ionizes an atomic Beam (2x1017 H0sec puled)
Pulsed 4 mA H-95% PolarizationBELOV
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W. Haeberli, PSTP-2007, BNL, USA
A. Belov & V. Derenchuk: ABPIS developers
ABPIS with Resonant Charge Exchange Ionization and Surface-Plasma D- generation
Muons, Inc.
• INR Moscow• H0↑+ D+ ⇒H+↑+ D0
• D0↑+ H+ ⇒D+↑+ H0
• σ~ 5 10-15cm2
• H0↑+ D−⇒H−↑+ D0
• D0↑+ H−⇒D−↑+ H0
• σ~ 10-14cm2
A. Belov, DSPIN2009
Atomic Beam Polarized Ion source
In the ABS, hydrogen or deuterium atoms are formed by dissociation of molecular gas, typically in a RF discharge. The atomic flux is cooled to a temperature 30K - 80K by passing through a cryogenically cooled nozzle. The atoms escape from the nozzle orifice into a vacuum and are collimated to form a beam. The beam passes through a region with inhomogeneous magnetic field created by sextupole magnets where atoms with electron spin up are focused and atoms with electron spin down are defocused.Nuclear polarization of the beam is increased by inducing transitions between the spin states of the atoms. The transition units are also used for a fast reversal of nuclear spin direction without change of the atomic beam intensity and divergence. Several schemes of sextupole magnets and RF transition units are used in the hydrogen or deuterium ABS. For atomic hydrogen, a typical scheme consists of two sextupole magnets followed by weak field and strong field RF transition units. In this case, the theoretical proton polarization will reach Pz = _1. Switching between these two states is performed by switching between operation of the weak field and the strong field RF transition units. For atomic deuterium, two sextupole magnets and three RF transitions are used in order to get deuterons with vector polarization of Pz = _1 and tensor polarization of Pzz= +1, -2Different methods for ionizing polarized atoms and their conversion into negative ions were developed in many laboratories. The techniques depended on the type of accelerator where the source is used and the required characteristics of the polarized ion beam (see ref. [2] for a review of current sources).For the pulsed atomic beam-type polarized ion source (ABPIS) the most efficient method was developed at INR, Moscow [3-5]. Polarized hydrogen atoms with thermal energy are injected into a deuterium plasma where polarized protons or negative hydrogen ions are formed due to the quasi-resonant charge-exchange reaction:
Ionization of polarized atoms
Resonant charge-exchange reaction is charge exchange between atom and ion of the same atom: A0 + A+ →A + + A0
•cross -section is of order of 10-14 cm2 at low collision energy
•Charge-exchange between polarized atoms and ions of isotope relative the polarized atoms to reduce unpolarized background
•W. Haeberli proposed in 1968 an ionizer with colliding beams of ~1-2 keV D- ions and thermal polarized hydrogen atoms:
H0↑+ D−⇒H−↑+ D0
Cross-section vs collision energy for process
H + H0 H0 + H
= 10-14 cm2 at ~10eV collision energy
Schematic diagram of the ionizerfor polarized negative hydrogen ions production
Destruction of negative hydrogen ions in plasma
• H + e H0 + 2e ~ 410-15 cm2
• H + D+ H0 + D0 ~ 210-14 cm2
• H + D0 H0 + D ~ 10-14 cm2
• H + D2 H0 + D2 + e ~ 210-16 cm2
• H + D0 HD0 + e ~ 10-15 cm2
Details of ABIS with Resonant Charge Exchange Ionization
Resonance charge exchange ionizer with two steps surface plasma
converter
Jet of plasma is guided by magnetic field to internal surface of cone;
fast atoms bombard a cylindrical surface of surface plasma converter initiating a secondary emission of negative ions increased by cesium adsorption.
Probability of H- emission as function of work function (cesium coverage)
The surface work function decreases with deposition of particles with low ionization potential and the probability of secondary negative ion emission increases greatly from the surface bombarded by plasma particles.
Muons, Inc.
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INR ABIS: Oscilloscope Track of Polarized H- ion
Polarized H- ion Current 4 mA (vertical scale-1mA/div) Unpolarized D- ion current 60 mA (10mA/div)
A. Belov
Main Systems of INR ABIS with Resonant Charge Exchange Ionization
Muons, Inc.
The pulsed polarized negative ion source (CIPIOS) multi-milliampere beams for injection into the Cooler Injector Synchrotron (CIS). Schematic of ion source and LEBT showing the entrance to the RFQ.
The beam is extracted from the ionizer toward the ABS and is then deflected downward with a magnetic bend and towards the RFQ with an electrostatic bend. This results in a nearly vertical polarization at the RFQ entrance.
Belov, Derenchuk, PAC 2001
INJECTION OF BACKGROUND GAS AT DIFFERENT POSITION
ATTENUATION OF THE BEAM ISDEPENDENT FROM THE POSITIONOF THE GAS INJECTIOJN
NOT MANY EXPERIMENTAL DATAAVAILABLE
D.K.Toporkov, PSTP-2007, BNL, USA
Cryogenic Atomic Beam Source
Liquid nitrogenCryostatCryostatTwo group of magnets – S1, S2 (tapered magnets) and S3, S4, S5 (constant radius) driven independently, 200 and 350 A respectively
BINP atomic beam source with superconductor sextupoles
Focusing magnets
Permanent magnetsB=1.6 TSuperconductingB=4.8 T
sr rad srrad
Zelenski
OPPIS: Zelenski, Mori et al. 20 years of development
1.6 mA H-85-90% Polarization with new proton source 20-50mA possible
L.W. Anderson (Wisconsin) - optically pumped Na as donor (1979)
3 keV H+ POLARIZEDH+ AND H-
DONOR:
OPTICALLY PUMPEDCHARGE
EXCHANGE
B B
“SONA”TRANSITION
W. Haeberli, PSTP-2007, BNL, USA
BNL OPPIS, A. Zelenski
A general polarized RHIC OPPIS injector layout.
ECR: electron-cyclotronresonance proton source in SCS; SCS: superconducting solenoid; Na-jet: sodium-jetionizer cell; LSP: Lamb-shift polarimeter; M1, M2: dipole bending magnets.
Advanced OPPIS with high brightness BINP proton injector
1- proton source; 2- focusing solenoid; 3- hydrogen neutralizing cell; 4- superconducting solenoid; 5- helium gas ionizing cell; 6- optically pumped Rb vapor cell; 7- deflecting plates; 8- Sona transition region; 9- sodium ionizer cell; 10- pumping lasers; PV-pulsed gas valves.
Enhanced OPPIS with BINP injector
BINP Injector for OPPIS
Realistic Extrapolation for Future
ABS/RX Source: • H- ~ 10 mA, 1.2 π·mm·mrad (90%), Pz > 95%• D- ~ 10 mA, 1.2 π·mm·mrad (90%), Pzz >
95%OPPIS:• H- ~ 40 mA, 2.0 π·mm·mrad (90%), Pz ~ 90%• H+ ~ 40 mA, 2.0 π·mm·mrad (90%), Pz ~ 90% OPPIS intensity can be higher, but Polarization in ABS/RX Source can be higher
because ionization of polarized atoms is very selective and molecules do not decrease polarization.
Muons, Inc.
3He++ Ion source with Polarized 3He Atoms and Resonant Charge
Exchange Ionization
A.S. Belov, PSTP-2007, BNL, USA
Cross-section vs collision energy for process He++ + He0 →He0 + He++
σ=5⋅10-16cm2 at ~10eV collision energy
A.S. Belov, PSTP-2007,
BNL, USA
Polarized 6Li+++ Optionsand other elements with low ionization potential
Existing Technology:• Create a beam of polarized atoms using ABS• Ionize atoms using surface ionization on an 1800 K
Tungsten (Rhenium) foil – singly charged ions of a few 10’s of µA
• Accelerate to 5 keV and transport through a Cs cell to produce negative ions. Results in a few hundred nA’s of negative ions (can be increased significantly in pulsed mode of operation)
• Investigate alternate processes such as quasiresonant charge exchange, EBIS ionizer proposal or ECR ionizer. Should be possible to get 1 mA (?) fully stripped beam with high polarization
• Properties of 6Li: Bc= 8.2 mT, m/mN= 0.82205, I = 1
Bc = critical field m/mN= magnetic moment, I = Nuclear spin
Muons, Inc.
Production of highest polarization and reliable operation are main goals of ion sources development in the Jefferson
Lab Development of Universal Atomic Beam Polarized
Sources (most promising, less expensive for repeating) .
• It is proposed to develop one universal H-/D-/He ion source design which will synthesize the most advanced developments in the field of polarized ion sources to provide high current, high brightness, ion beams with greater than 90% polarization, good lifetime, high reliability, and good power efficiency. The new source will be an advanced version of an atomic beam polarized ion source (ABPIS) with resonant charge exchange ionization by negative ions, which are generated by surface-plasma interactions.
Muons, Inc.
Ion Sources for Electron Ion Colliders
Optimized versions of existing polarized ion sources (ABPS and OPPIS) and advanced injection methods are capable to delivery ion beam parameters necessary for
Projected high luminosity of EIC.Good luck for Slava & Ko to reach
this outstanding goals.
Muons, Inc.