Long-LifeTime, Short Pulse, High Current Ion Source and Particle Accelerator
20230260737 · 2023-08-17
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02E30/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H05H2007/082
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Current state-of-the art ion sources do not meet multiple application needs for pulsed ion beams because current designs limit obtaining the needed peak currents, anode current densities, total currents, time averaged currents and lifetime in the same structure. High surface energy, power loading, material erosion and stresses damage surfaces. Our concepts for a ‘cold’ anode structure and ion source will reduce these erosion and damage issues. By extending lifetime and performance characteristics multiple applications can be enabled with lower maintenance and cost. The concepts here reduce the surface aging and provide the high performance (peak current, high current density and long lifetime required.
Claims
1. An apparatus comprising: (a) a cold anode ion source as described herein; (b) an accelerator; (c) a target; (d) a control system configured to produce short pulses.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the control system is configured to produce pulses having full width at half maximum less than 1 microsecond.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a detector.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising an optical system configured to heat the anode by directing light to the anode along a different path than that taken by ions emitted.
5. An apparatus comprising: (a) an ion source, comprising an anode and a cathode; (b) one or more power transmitting surfaces; (c) a light source; (d) one or more focusing elements, configured to focus light from the light source onto the anode along a path distinct from that taken by emitted ions; (e) a vacuum region; (f) a timing control unit configured to generate pulses having full width at half maximum of less than 1 microsecond.
6. The apparatus of claim 5, further comprising one or more detectors.
7. The apparatus of claim 5, further comprising an electron repression grid.
8. A cold anode ion source as described herein.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the anode comprises an anode as claim 8.
10. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the light source is configured to provide uniform illumination to the anode.
11. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein, in operation the anode produces an anode plasma sheath, and wherein the cathode is configured to provide uniform electron flow over the anode and the anode plasma sheath.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY AND MODES OF CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
[0030] A diode suitable for the applications described above needs to be dramatically different than those discussed in the literature—it needs to have long-life meaning capable of many shots—not shelf-life—a common miscommunication, and the divergence can be high for most embodiments. Only in the situation where a point source is required (for imaging purposes, a low- to moderate divergence is required) is divergence important. The difference in designs is shown in the text and figures below. The present invention provides for multiple instances. A design tradeoff is in the definition of long-life—the focusing geometries can all employ an easily maintained target or one where the generator cathode is rotated or otherwise renewed when needed.
[0031] The present invention contemplates several embodiments of ion diodes that can be used for different use cases in the development of methods for nuclear activation analysis or the other applications mentioned above. These efficiently provide electrical energy conversion into high energy ions or electrons (with reversed polarity). The methods will work under appropriate conditions for solid surface ion source and for gas surface ion sources. Both surface-based (or solid surface) sources and gases can be used as the source of ions. The specific designs are dependent upon the end-use and system tradeoffs. In aggregate the methods used cover a wide range of beam parameters. The efficiency is needed in each component of a generator design to accommodate the relatively long-life, short pulse conditions required by the applications.
[0032] The present disclosure provides advances in the three elements: ion source, transport, and target. The present disclosure describes them as part of a system although each can provide advantages separately.
[0033] Each pulsed ion beam system is a little different. For purposes of this disclosure, consider it as comprising three main components. These are: [0034] a. ion sources designed for specific purposes. [0035] b. transport region [0036] c. a target.
[0037] In
[0038] The invention contemplates both multiple beam transport concepts (a defocused beam for longest-lifetime maximizing lifetime) and a focused beam where spot size is important to enable imaging. The invention contemplates two types of ion source designs. These designs can reduce surface heating. One utility difference is that some applications cannot support the power/system-volume or mechanical robust requirements of gas handling and are willing to accept shorter lifetime as system tradeoffs. A generic pulsed power system is shown in
[0039] Variations of the overall system also include one which uses a solid substrate in order maintain the long-lifetime requirements in a sealed system. The other employs a more complex system involving a gas as the source of ions, rather than a solid surface. It brings with it the need for a gas handling, pumping and cooling infrastructure. The solid surface design can be suitable for low power, portable systems and the more complex system can enable longer lifetime, lower maintenance, and more intense beams. Another variant can use a shaped anode surface and focusing electric/magnetic fields which will create a higher current density at the target, limiting lifetime but enhancing the performance of an imaging system. Shaping the anode and adjusting the transport features are aspects we incorporate into the long-life diodes and can be done with gas or solid surface sources.
[0040] One approach useful in the creation of intense long-life accelerators as described here is keeping the surface and bulk temperatures low and limiting the stress caused by magnetic fields to those which will not damage the surface configurations or cause depletion of either the source material or target material. This can be done by providing a large area source which is non-thermally heated and the desired beam particles are preferentially ionized.
[0041] At the source, we do this through a balance of controlled optical ionization, controlled electron field generation and the creation of a proportion/ionizing/avalanche generating region. A tertiary effect of heating and material damage is material erosion of surfaces from heating moves material around inside the tube; this eroded material deposits on places it is not wanted and can degrade performance over time. This is preferably minimized. At the target we increase the surface area by adding controlled texture to ‘see’ the beam so the heat load per unit area is reduced. We also provide means of refreshing the surfaces and low effort replacement of parts.
[0042] Initially, semi-static electric fields of the primary anode cathode are generated, as well as the accelerator grid from the secondary anode (which is also the primary cathode). These bias fields are applied at nearly the same time as the photon source is supplied to the primary anode surface and/or gas volume. The first ionization in the system happens under non-LTE conditions, as an LED/laser/flashlamp can be used to preferentially excite the ion of choice over a large region of the source; more typical flashover type electron motion generates ionization as well. Coupled inductance (not shown) between the electrodes provide dynamic charge to avoid local Child-Langmuir current saturation effects. This does not fully ionize the system by design. We create just enough ionization that the electron flow between the primary anode and cathode (a mesh) is enough to generate a non-thermal heating of the preferentially ionized beam material and the bias between the primary anode and mesh accelerates ions through the mesh.
[0043] For the currents we are generating, starting at tens of Amperes to over MegaAmps peak, there are other features we can adjust for. These include beam motion as current varies with voltage and time, for the beam (and within it little beamlets). We also control the electron emission which can give rise to too much surface heating. Magnetically insulted transmission lines, whereby high magnetic fields in regions where there is high voltage control the electron transport, of order Volts/Amp or MV/MA (mega-volt per megaAmp) per unit current flow can be useful for creating ion sources. However, they can damage surfaces and the high magnetic fields can warp materials. We do this by adding sharp features which will create controlled high-electric field multiplication regions. Instead of trying to make nanotips (see Hertz, Resnick, et al), or Schoenfield, et al.) which heat and fail, we create large areas at lower electric fields and do not rely upon electric field ionization or desorption. The high electric fields act as the field in an avalanche or GEM (gaseous electron multiplier).
[0044] Ion diode concepts have been used in the past. M. S. Derzon et al., “Results of beam characterization measurements on PBFA II (abstract),” Review of Scientific Instruments, vol. 61, no. 10, pp. 3144-3144, October 1990, doi: 10.1063/1.1141711; M. E. Cuneo et al., “SABRE extraction ion diode results and the prospects for eight ion inertial fusion energy drivers,” in IEEE Conference Record Abstracts. 1999 IEEE International Conference on Plasma Science. 26th IEEE International Conference (Cat. No. 99CH36297), June 1999, pp. 275-, doi: 10.1109/PLASMA.1999.829621. These methods were not employed in the same manner we are employing them. Instead, the present embodiment provides short pulsed long-life particle accelerators generators. We describe in detail tubes with both initially solid ion sources, liquid, and gas. We present transport regions specific to meeting the long lifetime needs of these tubes, with cooling, and packaging for low cost refueling and replacement. For a neutron generator accelerator biases of 60-300 keV are most advantageous. For other applications such as an isotope generator where perhaps 25 MeV are desired the transport region geometry and complexity will be more involved.
[0045] Accelerators and neutron generators have been built before and we are moving the rhetoric to unique features included in embodiments of the present invention. Now that we have described some of the elements of the Long-Life Pulsed (LoLiPP) particle accelerator, additional detail on the generic elements will be provided.
[0046] For clarity and simplicity, we do not show an electron reflection grid near the secondary anode (the target) which reduces the secondary electron backscatter off the anode surface. That style mesh element is in use elsewhere in a similar manner as in the present invention.
[0047] Embodiments of the present invention provide systems enabling these to be long life, at very high peak currents (>10 Amps), stable/consistent amounts of beam current and peak current densities greater than ten Amps per centimeter squared. Embodiments of the present invention provide long-life neutron tube version of the particle accelerator with the dominant elements shown.
[0048] The system can be scaled to multiple values of peak current and designed for a range of total neutron yields where the specific heating rates are controlled to provide long-life in each element. Example embodiments of this scaling are shown in the figures. Certain elements such as the mesh surface and target surfaces are preferably designed for rapid replacement and long operational lifetimes. The figures illustrate a range of embodiments all of which work and offer advantages under different circumstances to fill out the phase space defined by
[0049] Under focusing or defocusing geometries and ion source specific design we use techniques not employed in the literature to enable the system. The matrix below, Table 1, describes concepts that contribute to the long-life diode, source, and target elements.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Matrix gas vs solid surface role. Gas Source, Surface or Both Invention Method (G/S/B) Non-thermal Large Area Source Controlled electron deposition, photon B excitation ionization, electric field multiplication Maximum Surface area exposure at Fritted, machined, or lithographically B target and maximized thermal structure surfaces conduction and/or cooling at cathodes and anodes Gas Puff Source Valve (MEMs or traditional), w or w/o gas G cooling to increase temperature Replaceable Source mechanism Rotation w/in vacuum or requiring B automated replacement or substitution Replaceable Target Mechanism Rotation w/in vacuum or requiring B automated replacement or substitution Controlled and limited direct heating Electron flow and energy deposition on B on anode surface anode is limited based on structured surface for cathode emission.
[0050] Specifically, lifetime is determined by factors that include: (1) source loading—the actual number of source ions available, (2) heating causing damage of the materials, (3) aging of the dielectric materials, (4) target loading, the number of target species available in the target, (5) focusing of the source ions onto the target, (6) cooling of the materials.
[0051] In
[0052] There are several main components in an example embodiment of a neutron generator system, including the acceleration region, the target, and the ion source.
[0053] Embodiments disclosed herein include features that lead us to name the variations of the ion diode a LoLiPP diode. LoLiPP stands for Long Life Pulsed Power diode or accelerator.
[0054] Example embodiments of the present invention provide methods to obtain solid and gas ion source performance and lifetime, extended lifetime transport region with relative low breakdown conditions, large area source and target with active coiling where needed as well as gas tube pumping and elements for refurbishment without automatic destruction. There is a focusing geometry design for when lifetime can be reduced in favor of imaging nuclear activation target.
[0055] Note that most ions beams operate over long times (seconds—years) compared to the example embodiments disclosed herein, and at much lower total currents (microamp vs tens to megaAmps). These features of example embodiments reduce the heating and it is both the heating and magnetic fields (which generate stresses) which cause most damage and limit lifetime. Materials erode, tips deform, surfaces warp. For many applications, the total current (in Coulombs) may be similar.
[0056] Thermal heating, ion desorption or electric field desorption are used to create ions that then flow into an acceleration region. Embodiments of the present invention employ three techniques to reduce bulk heating and create highly non-thermal ionization to generate the ions which get accelerated. Another way of looking at this is temperature is a means of describing the equilibrium condition. All the electrons and atoms get heated when raising temperature to generate the free ions and electrons. This takes energy and contributes to the damage. For our purposes we can do non-thermal processes to initiate an electron multiplication process in a non-thermal manner to preferentially heat the material which becomes the ion beam or ions accelerated in the transport region. Examples of non-thermal processes include: [0057] (1) laser ionization tuned to the source material (for instance the 656 nm absorption feature in Deuterium gas), or highly absorbing materials loaded with the target ion, we feed this into the system via fiber optics, lenses coupled to either fiber sources, laser diode stacks, or tuned flashlamp. [0058] (2) electrons emitted from shaped cathode structures and fields meant to controlled interactions with the anode surface, sheath plasma or gas puff via magnetic field control structures (see literature in MITLs; these features are most useful in the higher current density systems). [0059] (3) direct electron desorption off cathode surface (these electrons act much like those in a GEM (gaseous electron multiplier) or flashover ion source systems, used to generate gain, here we use them as massively scaled electron sources for ionizing the ion source. A variant of this could be used to create an intense electron beam. [0060] (4) mild heating at tips to evolve initial gas and induced arcing off thermal source (like a spark plug)—this will provide long-lifetime systems because the bulk of the heating is done in the gas source not at the surfaces.
[0061] Some of the early figures mention photon induced ionization (use fiber optic injection either onto solid surface or into gas region of ion source creates non-thermal modestly ionized material). Because of a relatively low initial ionization the material may not fit the definition of a plasma due to low overall ionization. However, enough free electrons can be generated at the local high electric fields to create a multiplication or avalanche effect in the surface released gases or in the gas itself if there is a flowing gas volume over the tips. An example embodiment, for a compact application, is shown in
[0062] The surface has been designed to increase electric fields in local regions drawing enough ionization to create the avalanche or proportionality in the ion density formed to meet the beam current densities required. This is because the ion source is scalable in area for very high peak currents and high current densities (>0.5 A/cm2) with large total anode area. This enables multiple embodiments and applications. There is a good deal of energy per pulse from all mechanisms, which is a significant feature that we minimize that heating per accelerated particle we generate. The acceleration region also requires a great deal of energy per pulse. The amount of energy required to make an individual ion much higher than the energy to create a single accelerated ion. Crudely speaking, in many beams the energy to create the ion beam at the source is roughly the same as the energy deposited at the target. Depending on the specific application and design this number can be a factor of 10 lower or higher. It is a significant reason that there will be a great deal of heating at the target and that there is a high potential for heating to damage the surface. Preferably, the surface structure and shape is configured to reduce the specific heating and damage at the surface.
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[0075] Embodiments of the present invention can provide:
A system for a long-life, high peak current particle beam accelerator.
A system for a long-life, scalable peak current and anode area intense particle beam accelerator.
A system for a long-life, scalable current intense particle beam accelerator for imaging (x ray, gamma, proton, electron, etc.).
A scalable area high current intense particle beam source capable of accelerating, electrons, protons, He, and other ions.
A non-LTE low energy deposition ion and electron source of scaleable peak current and peak current density.
A high Intensity beam particle source with multiple-ionization methods to improve lifetime and performance.
A focused ion beam at high peak current and high current density for heavy ion fusion.
A focused ion beam at high peak current and high current density for small scale isotope manufacture.
A focused ion beam at high peak current and high current density for kinetic energy weapons.
A neutron generator of reproducible yield and lifetime appropriate for portable detection of Special Nuclear Weapons and CBRNE threats.
A system for a long-life high current particle beam accelerator.
A system for a long-life very bright particle generator for Tc-99/Mo-99 and other medical isotope generation.
A system for a long-life very bright neutron generator.
A scalable area cold plasma ion source.
A long-life, scalable-area ion source.
A long-life (many shot) target for an ion beam.
A bright (n/s), compact, short pulse nearly-monoenergetic neutron generator.
A gaseous ion source design, characterized by electron surface heating using a mild magnetically insulated transport.
A gaseous ion source design, characterized by electron surface heating using a mild magnetically-insulated transport.
A fritted hydrogen-isotope structure solid surface for long-lifetime operation at high current density (>1 A/cm{circumflex over ( )}2.
A gaseous ion source design, characterized by electron surface heating using a mild magnetically-insulated transport.
A short transport region for unfocused ion beam transport to a target in order to limit heating at the target. Roughly half of the system power is input at the source. The other half occurs at the target end. A defocused beam or a beam which moves in time across the target region will have much lower energy density at the target and this is why this is done. We electrostatically draw the beam across the surface as the bias voltage changes the beam steering changes as well.
A method and embodiment for gas ionization and extraction during for a long life, >1 A/cm{circumflex over ( )}2, short pulse ion source using electric field multiplication of photon induced ionized gas, supplemented with magnetically-controlled electron enhancement.
A method and embodiment for gas ionization and extraction during for a long life, >1 A/cm{circumflex over ( )}2, short pulse ion source.
A gaseous ion source design, characterized by electron surface heating using a mild magnetically-insulated transport.
An solid surface ion source design, characterized by electron surface heating using a mild magnetically-insulated electron transport to maximize source lifetime.
A method for ultrahigh rate material identification (nuclear material, or chemical), via spectroscopic and time varying emission rates.
Combined ability to enhance the identification of materials with any or all the methods (energy spectroscopy, timing or emission features, and imaging.
Rotatable target for long life usage without tube replacement or service.
Rotatable source substrate for long life usage without tube replacement or service.
In-field replaceable accelerator tube for low cost operation and in-field life enhancement. Gas Phase Ion source with low surface heating and ultralong, low maintenance lifetime.
[0076] The present invention has been described in connection with various example embodiments. It will be understood that the above descriptions are merely illustrative of the applications of the principles of the present invention, the scope of which is to be determined by the claims viewed in light of the specification. Other variants and modifications of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art.