1. Introduction
Charged particles, such as proton, are useful tools for transmission radiography [1-3]. Nuclear interaction with the nucleus, multiple Coulomb scattering (MCS) with the Coulomb field of the nucleus, and ionization with the electrons are three major types of interaction when protons pass through materials. However, MCS effect may seriously blur the final image. Zumbro lens (magnetic lens) can focus the scattered particles to obtain clear image, which has been successfully demonstrated both by simulations and experiments [4-17].
To eliminate the major part of chromatic blur, a matched beam of a Zumbro lens is a virtual-point source beam, but this will introduce additional blur when the sample is cylindrical. In this case, a parallel beam is more appropriate.
A method for designing a magnetic lens with parallel beam matched is developed in this paper.
2. Description of Zumbro lens
A typical Zumbro lens consists of four quadrupole magnets, as shown schematically in Fig. 1, where k and l are strength and length of quadrupoles, respectively; D1 and D2 are the drift space lengths, and f is the focal length.
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Under certain condition [4], the transfer matrix of a Zumbro lens becomes a minus-identity (–I) matrix, which satisfies the requirements of point-to-point imaging, being assumed for a monoenergetic incident particle beam. However, energy spread always exists, and particles off the design momentum will deviate from the central trajectory due to the chromatic aberration. This problem can be partially solved by the second order chromatic matching.
Suppose an incident particle comes from a virtual point source at a distance L upstream of the entry plane of the lens, due to both MCS in the object and the beam emittance, the particle will exit the object at an angle
where w=L−1 is the beam correlation coefficient, and ϕ is the angular deviation from the ideal position-angle correlation line. The matrix elements in general are functions of the fractional momentum deviation Δ(≡δp/p). By expanding the final position of the particle in Taylor series form to the first order, it is found that w should satisfy the following equations in order to realize the second order chromatic matching design (primes indicate momentum derivatives)
where R′11 and R′12 are the differentials of R11 and R22. All positions depend on chromatic aberrations vanishing, and the final transverse position is then given by
The chromatic blur caused by the energy spread becomes R′12ϕΔ, and the chromatic coefficient is R′12.
At the mid-plane of a chromatically matched identity lens, the transverse position of a particle is given by
where M is the transfer matrix of the first half of Zumbro lens. Eq. (4) implies that after the first cell, the transverse position of the particle depends only on ϕ.
According to Eq. (2), the two correlation coefficients at X-plane and Y-plane can be written as follows
In the Zumbro lens, we have R′11 = R′33 and R′12 = R′34 because of the symmetry, thus one gets
This implies that the beam is convergent in one direction and divergent in the other one, as shown in Fig. 2.
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Here the coefficient L is dependent on wx or wy, with the relationship |wx|=|wy|=1/L.
3. Demand of parallel beam radiography
Point source beam is not the best choice in some practical applications. In fact, parallel beam is much more desirable in these applications. In some radiography experiments with cylindrical samples, as shown in Fig. 3, additional blur will be introduced when a point source beam is adopted, but this can be avoided by using a parallel source beam.
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Unlike the chromatic blur, the additional blur described above is interrelated with the sample, and it does not exist when there is no lateral drift in the sample. As an example, for an 800 MeV proton beam, a tentative design gives R′11=4.058 and R′12=9.336 m. Assume that the angular deviation of the beam is 5 mrad, and the energy deviation is 0.5%, the chromatic blur is then 0.24 mm according to Eq.(3). The correlation coefficient wx is −0.435 m−1 from Eq.(5). If the cylindrical sample in Fig. 3 is sized at Φ1cm×1cm, the additional blur is 0.23 mm, which is about the same as the chromatic blur. Surely, the additional blur increases with the sample size. Parallel beam can eliminate the additional blur.
In Ref. [18], we proposed a type of magnetic lens making use of the energy-loss information of the particles. Similarly to the angle collimation in Zumbro lens, the energy can be collimated in the energy-loss lens. If both energy collimation and angle collimation are in demand, the energy-loss lens and Zumbro lens are expected to be cascaded, i.e., an energy-loss lens followed by a Zumbro lens, or vice versa. Unfortunately, the different matching conditions of the two types of lens prevent them from being cascaded, since the energy-loss lens demands a parallel matched beam.
So another magnetic lens with parallel beam matched is desired.
4. Design study of the new magnetic lens
Zumbro lenses have two main characteristics: 1) the transfer matrix is minus identity matrix, and 2) the mid-plane is an angle Fourier plane. The new lens will inherit the two characteristics, which are two constraints for the new lens. Also, the matched beam should be parallel beam, i.e., w in Eq. (2) should be zero. So the third constraint is
As shown in Fig. 1, Zumbro lens forms a reflection symmetric quadrupole beamline. A quadrupole beamline is reflection symmetric if its second half is the mirror image of the first half, which means the sequence of drifts and quads is traversed in the reverse order and with the opposite signs for the magnetic fields.
The new lens has also symmetric characteristic, like Zumbro lens. Two cases are proposed here.
4.1 Reflection symmetric case
The reflection symmetry forces that [4] R44=R11, R33=R22, R34=R12, R43=R21. In this case, the lens needs at least 8 quadrupole magnets to keep the symmetry characteristics. It consists of a repetition of two identical unit cells, each of which is reflection symmetric itself. The optical configuration is shown in Fig. 4, where k is the quadrupole strength, l is its length, f is its focal length, and D1–D3 are the drift space lengths.
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Considering the symmetry, only the expressions in X-plane are analyzed in the following paragraphs. Like Zumbro lens described in Section 2, the transfer matrix of the whole lens is written as R, and the one of the first half is written as M.
The symmetry forces give that [4]
where τ =M11+M22 is the trace of matrix M. If the trace τ=0, it can be seen that R becomes the minus identity matrix (−I), so the first constraint is satisfied.
When energy spread is included, Eq. (9) gives the momentum derivatives of the matrix elements as follows,
Especially, we get R′11= τ′Mjk.
Considering the third constraint of the new lens expressed in Eq. (8), since τ′ is not always zero (which can be verified by a simulation of thin-lens approximation), we have M11 =0. As the symmetry forces M11 = M22, we have M11=M22=0. At the middle plane of the lens, the particle position is xmid =M11x0+M12x′0, which becomes
So the second constraint is satisfied naturally. Notice that in Eq. (4), the angle is expressed as ϕ, which is only the additive part in Eq. (1), while in Eq. (11), the angle is the total one in Eq. (1). However, when parallel beam is adopted, x0′ becomes ϕ since w becomes zero. So on the X plane, M11=M22=0 is the only constraint required for the new lens. Conditions on the Y-plane can be got similarly, we have M33=M44=0.
Since the first half is reflection symmetric, M11=M22=0 and M33=M44=0 are satisfied simultaneously. Eq. (10) shows that R'12= R'34. This implies that the chromatic coefficients of X-plane and Y-plane are equal.
4.2 Symmetric case
The difference between a symmetric quadrupole beamline and a reflection symmetric one is that the magnetic fields of the second half are in opposite signs. The symmetry forces that R22=R11, R44=R33. In this case, six quadrupole magnets are enough. The configuration is shown in Fig. 5.
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The deduction in Sect. 4.1 is still valid, but M11=M22=0 and M33=M44=0 are not definitely satisfied simultaneously since the symmetry is different. Also, the chromatic aberrations of X and Y plane are not equal since R'12= R'34 is invalid.
Notice that here the first half of the lens is itself symmetric. From Eq. (10) and the symmetry condition, we have M11=M22, so τ = 0 and M11=M22=0 are of equivalence. The advantage of the symmetric case is that the number of magnets is less, while the advantage of the reflection symmetric case is that the chromatic aberrations of X- and Y-plane are equal.
5. Analysis in thin-lens approximation
For a thin lens, one has df/dΔ=f, where f is the focal length of the thin lens.
5.1 Zumbro lens
The chromatic factor for a Zumbro lens (see Fig. 1) is
Therefore, to decrease the chromatic blur of a Zumbro lens, the D1 and D2 should be as small as possible.
5.2 Reflection symmetric case
Write the transfer matrix of Fig. 4 in thin-lens approximation. Using df/dΔ=f, the chromatic factor can be written as
Eq.(13) is rather complicated, but calculation shows that the chromatic factor is close to the length of the magnetic lens.
As M33=M44=0, it can be deduced that f1 and f2 are the functions of D1, D2 and D3, so does R′12. There are three free parameters in this system: D1, D2 and D3. It is not easy to study generally. To find some quantitative laws, and for simplicity, the following three cases are considered. (a) D1=nd, D2=d, D3=d; (b) D1=d, D2=nd, D3=d; (c) D1=d, D2=d, D3=nd. Here n varies from 0 to 5. The curves in Fig. 6 can be obtained, where the values on the x-and y-axes are n and R′12, respectively. It can be seen that R′12 increases with D1 or D2, but decreases with increasing D3.
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5.3 Symmetric case
Write the transfer matrix of Fig. 5 in thin-lens approximation. Using df/dΔ=f, the chromatic factors can be written as
The two factors are not equal to each other in this case. From M11=M22=0 and M33=M44=0, it can be deduced that f1 and f2 are the functions of D1 and D2, so do R′12 and R′34.
Again, two cases are considered: (a) D1=nd, D2=d; (b) D1=d, D2=nd. The R′12 and R′34 obtained are shown in Fig. 7. One sees that R′12 increases with D1, but when D2 increases R′12 decreases first to a minimum and then increases; while R′34 increases with D1, but decreases with increasing D2.
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6 Theoretical design based on 11 MeV proton beam
An 11 MeV proton cyclotron was designed and constructed at Institute of Fluid Physics [19], with CW proton beams of 11 MeV and 50 μA. The lens uses the reflection symmetric structure, with (see Fig. 4) D1=0.3 m, D2=0.3 m, D3=0.1 m, l=0.2 m, k1=1.89037 T/m, k2=5.11052 T/m, and a total length of 4.4 m).
As mentioned in Section 4, the chromatic coefficient R′12 is close to the length of the lens, which is 4.549 m.
Proton trajectories in the lens, simulated using the MyBOC code [20], are shown in Fig. 8, where different angular deviations are represented by different line styles, and Z and X are the longitude and transverse position, respectively. It can be seen that the lens is a point-to-point system. When the incident beam is parallel, particles with the same angular deviation reach the mid-plane at a same position, so the mid-plane is the angle Fourier plane. Also, the envelope oscillation is small.
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7 Conclusion
A parallel incident beam is desired in practical applications, while Zumbro magnetic lens uses virtual-point source beam as its matched input. Through analyses using the transfer matrix method, we have proposed a new type of magnetic lens. It is advantageous in the matched parallel beam, while keeping the main characteristics of the Zumbro lens. Theoretic analysis, both constructions of reflective symmetry and symmetry, suggests the possible optical arrangements of the lens. The analysis shows that the new lens can fulfill all the functions of Zumbro lens. A theoretical design based on a cyclotron with 11 MeV proton beam is demonstrated. Experimental demonstration of the new imaging-lens system will be carried out on this accelerator.
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