Introduction
High-intensity heavy-ion accelerator facility (HIAF) [1, 2] is a next-generation storage-ring-based heavy-ion facility proposed by the Institute of Modern Physics (IMP). The major scientific goals of HIAF are to explore the hitherto unknown territories in the nuclear chart, study exotic nuclear structures, synthesize super-heavy nuclides and elements, understand the origin of heavy elements in the universe, and develop novel heavy-ion applications in space and material sciences [3, 4]. Since 2016, HIAF has been under design and construction [5]. HIAF comprises a 45-GHz superconducting electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) ion source [6-8], a superconducting ion Linac (iLinac) [9-11], a booster ring (BRing) [12-14], a high-energy radioactive beamline (high energy fragment separator (HFRS)) [15], a storage ring (SRing) [16, 17], and several experimental terminals. The ions produced by the ion source will be accelerated by the iLinac to a particular energy, depending on the charge-to-mass ratio of the ions, and then injected into the BRing, where the ions will be accumulated and further accelerated to high energy. To meet the requirements of the different experiments, the BRing can provide very intense heavy ion beams with reasonable energies or ion beams with higher energies at the expense of beam intensities. Taking the ion of uranium as an example, over 1.0 × 1011 U35+ ions can be stored in the BRing, and the highest energy would be 835 MeV/u, or the energy of 2.6 GeV/u could be achieved while the intensity would be much lower [5]. In the latter case, the ions need stripping to higher charge states before they are injected into the BRing such that higher acceleration efficiency can be gained in the ring.
Charge strippers are widely utilized in heavy ion accelerator facilities at different energy stages to enhance the acceleration efficiencies downstream of the strippers. The unprecedented high power of the ion beams from state-of-the-art accelerator facilities, such as the RIKEN RI Beam Factory (RIBF, Japan), the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR, Germany), the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB, U.S.A.) and HIAF, etc., presents a significant challenge to the strippers. To accommodate to the different ion beam conditions, various strippers are employed at these facilities. For example, there are two strippers at RIBF: one is a helium gas stripper to strip U35+ to U64+ at the energy of 10.8 MeV/u [18, 19], and the other is a rotating highly oriented graphite sheet to strip U64+ to U86+ at 51 MeV/u, which performs excellently in terms of the lifetime owing to its superior thermal diffusion and thermal conduction properties [20, 21]. To meet the high-intensity heavy-ion requirements for the FAIR project, a high-density fast pulsed hydrogen-gas cell stripper has been developed to strip 1.4 MeV/u U4+ ions with a current intensity up to 7.6 emA and the pulse duration of 100 μs [22-24]. Owing to the pulsed gas cell synchronized with the ion beams, a high stripper density was achieved while the gas load was reduced significantly, resulting in an increased stripping efficiency compared with the previous nitrogen gas jet operated in continuous mode. Considering the high average thermal power deposited by the continuous high-power ion beams at FRIB, a windowless liquid lithium free-jet stripper has been developed in collaboration with Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). The hydrodynamic stability of the lithium jet was obtained with a flow velocity of 50 m/s, which also enables the removal of the extraordinarily high power [25, 26]. As for HIAF, the charge stripper should meet the requirements of stripping various ion species from H3+ to 238U35+: heavy ions should be stripped to sufficiently high charge states, whereas H3+ ions need to be stripped to protons efficiently. Owing to the density effect [27, 28], the average charge state resulting from a carbon-foil stripper is higher than that from a gas stripper. Moreover, stripping is only needed for the pulsed beams with moderate beam intensity and low duty cycle (0.1% based on 1-ms beam pulse duration and 1-Hz repetition rate, or even lower (see the discussion in Sect. 5.2), which means the average beam intensity is low. Therefore, a carbon foil stripper is chosen as the baseline design at this stage for HIAF-BRing.
Here, some key issues concerning the HIAF’s charge stripper, such as the charge state distributions after the stripper, the lifetime issues due to the thermal load, the emittance growth due to the stripping process, and the resultant effect on the ion number injected into the ring, will be presented and discussed.
Charge Stripper of HIAF-BRing
As illustrated in Fig. 1, the carbon foil stripper will be located at the injection line to the BRing. The ion beams accelerated by the iLinac will be stripped here if needed. The typical beam parameters from the iLinac are presented in Table 1. To minimize the emittance growth and beam loss caused by the enhanced space charge forces after stripping, the ions after the stripper will be separated immediately by the following dipole magnets.
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Ion species | Energy (MeV/u) | Current intensity (emA) | Pulse duration (ms) | Repetition frequency (Hz) | Emittance- geometric (π mm·mrad)1 | Moment spread |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
78Kr19+ | 27 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 6.5 | ±0.2% |
129Xe27+ | 30 | 1 | ||||
238U35+ | 17 | 1 | ||||
Compared with protons, the energy loss per ion per unit length in the stripper is much higher for heavy ions, especially for U ions, which brings a great challenge to the stripper in terms of its lifetime. In addition, the charge state distributions after stripping and the stripping efficiencies are of the most concern. In some cases, like for Xe and Kr ions, these two factors conflict, and a compromise must be made by choosing appropriate foil thickness, as seen in Sect. 3.
Charge state distributions after stripping
During the passage of the projectile ions through the stripper, the competition between electron loss and electron capture processes results in the evolution of the charge states of the ions. The cross sections of electron loss and electron capture converge gradually with the increasing charge state of the ions, i.e., the increasing passage thickness of the ions, and thus, the charge state distribution of the ions finally gets to equilibrium. The average charge state that can be obtained by stripping depends on the energy, the atomic number of the projectile ion, and the atomic number of the stripper as well. When a charge stripper is utilized, the equilibrium thickness must be determined beforehand such that high stripping efficiency can be achieved and extra emittance growth, energy loss, and energy straggling caused by unnecessary stripper thickness can be avoided. Dedicated codes such as ETACHA, GLOBAL, etc. can calculate equilibrium thicknesses and charge state distributions. The ETACHA code is appropriate for simulating the charge state evolution of the ions in a non-relativistic energy range crossing a solid or gas stripper, with the density effects and the shell effects taken into account [29, 30].
The charge state distributions of the typical ions after stripping calculated by the ETACHA code are illustrated in Fig. 2, which illustrates that the fraction of 50%, 19.5%, and 26.7% can be reached for Kr34+, Xe50+, and U79+ ions with the carbon foil thicknesses of 0.675, 0.85, and 1.0 mg/cm2, respectively. Among these three ion species, the equilibrium charge state is only achieved for U, which agrees well with the mean charge state predicted by Baron’s formula [31]. For the Kr and Xe ions, the most-populated charge states and the average charge states can be further increased by increasing the thicknesses of the strippers. However, the electron loss cross sections for the last two L-shell electrons, as in the case of Xe, and those for the K-shell electrons in the case of Kr, are much smaller than those for the outer electrons, which means that much thicker strippers than the present ones are required to get the equilibrium charge states while the stripping efficiency will decrease considerably. More importantly, the energy loss, energy straggling, and emittance growth will consequently increase (the influence of the stripper thickness on those parameters will be discussed below). Therefore, we choose the thinner thicknesses to get higher stripping efficiency and reasonable beam quality on a tradeoff of slightly lower charge states of the stripped ions. In the following part of this paper, all the calculations were based on the stripper thicknesses presented in this section, i.e., 0.675, 0.85, and 1.0 mg/cm2 for Kr, Xe, and U ions, respectively.
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Energy losses and energy spreads due to stripping
Ions not only lose electrons but also lose energy while passing through strippers. When a stripper is utilized, the energy loss and, more accurately, the energy distribution function of the ions after the stripper need to be considered. Given the thickness of the stripper tfoil, the energy loss could be calculated roughly utilizing the following formula.
To calculate the energy distributions of the ions after the stripper, the Monte Carlo calculations were carried out with the code GEANT4 [33, 34]. GEANT4 allows user-defined particle energy distributions and target thicknesses; thus, the initial energy distributions of the ions before stripping were utilized as the input parameters, and the non-uniform foil thicknesses. Carbon foils commonly have a deviation of ±5% from the nominal thicknesses, which was adopted in our calculations of the energy distributions. Figure 3 presents the energy distributions of the typical ions after the strippers calculated by the code GEANT4. To validate the calculations of GEANT4, the results for monoenergetic ions traversing uniform foil calculated by GEANT4 were compared with those calculated by SRIM [35], a well-established program dedicated to calculating the stopping and range of ions in matter. The output energy and the energy straggling calculated by the two programs were consistent.
-202405/1001-8042-35-05-009/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-05-009-F003.jpg)
As illustrated in Fig. 3, the average energy of Kr, Xe, and U ions after stripping is 26.82, 29.75, and 16.55 MeV/u, respectively. The energy spread of the U beam is larger than that of the Kr and Xe beams, which is easy to understand. The energy spread introduced by the non-uniform foil thickness can be estimated with the following equation.
In the models of GEANT4 and SRIM, the projectile ions are treated with an effective charge, which means the charge exchange straggling is not considered during the calculations. It will lead to an underestimation of the final energy spread. To calculate the charge exchange straggling accurately, the cross sections for all relevant electronic transitions in the projectile all along its traveling path are needed. Much theoretical work [32, 36-38] has been elaborately conducted to deal with that. Here, we adopted Yang’s empirical formula [39], widely utilized to calculate electronic energy loss straggling. Stemming from Bohr’s classical formula, Yang et al. considered charge state fluctuations and other correlation effects and consequently developed the following empirical straggling formula.
Ion species | Contributions to final energy spread (σ-%) | Final energy spread (σ-%) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Initial spread | Yang’s energy straggling | Non-uniformity of thickness | ||
Kr | 0.133 | 0.029 | 0.033 | 0.144 |
Xe | 0.133 | 0.066 | 0.044 | 0.153 |
U | 0.133 | 0.131 | 0.140 | 0.236 |
Compromise between stripper temperature and emittance growth
Constraint on foil temperature
When a solid-state stripper is utilized, its lifetime is one of the main concerns. The lifetime of a foil stripper is mainly determined by accumulated radiation damage and evaporation of the foil. From the first adoption of solid-state strippers, researchers have been making efforts to estimate the lifetime of strippers quantitatively. Among them, Levedev drew a physical picture of carbon foils’ failure under irradiation and derived the formulae to estimate the lifetime of carbon foils due to radiation damage [42]. Based on Levedev’s theory, “stripper lifetime utility” was integrated into the program LISE++ since Version 8.3.6 [43], which utilizes Eq. (15) in Ref. [42] to calculate the lifetime of carbon foils due to radiation damages. In the following updated versions, k1’s dependence on the atomic number of the projectile has been introduced to reproduce experimental data for projectiles in a wide region, and then Equation 15 in Ref. [42] has been transformed as follows
Compared with some semi-empirical treatments during the derivation of Eq. (4), the calculation of the foil evaporation could be more accurate. Although the sublimation temperature of the carbon is approximately 3900 K, evaporation occurs for a carbon foil bombarded by intensive ion beams even if the temperature is much lower than 3900 K. The evaporation rate increases with the temperature as follows [44, 45]
According to the research of Lebedev et al. [42], the failure of a carbon foil is dominated by irradiation damage at the temperature below 2500 K and by evaporation and sublimation at the temperature beyond 2500 K, in which case the lifetime of the carbon foil is generally only a few hours or even shorter. Here, we set a limit of 2200 K on the foil temperature, corresponding to a maximum evaporation rate of 10-3 (μg/cm2)/s.
Non-stationary thermal analysis of foil bombarded by pulsed ion beams
To evaluate the lifetime of the stripper foil in terms of heating effect, the temperature evolution of the foil was calculated with the code Ansys with a non-stationary thermal model. The following equations can describe the heat conduction in the foil [46].
P in Eq. (6) represents the power density deposited in the foil by the pulsed ion beams and can be expressed as follows.
With the non-stationary model, the evolution of the foil temperature for the beam parameters listed in Table 1 (1-emA beam intensity in 1-ms pulse duration with the repetition frequency of 1 Hz) was simulated by the code Ansys. The values of σx and σy were set to 2.45 mm, which are the baseline design values for the injection beamline at the position of the stripper. The maximum foil temperature for U and Xe beams are 4188.3 and 2460.6 K, respectively, resulting in very short lifetimes of the strippers due to evaporation, which is unacceptable.
Synthesis of foil temperature, emittance growth, and number of injection turns
One important fact has been ignored in the preceding temperature calculation. In the simulation, we took the beam pulse duration of 1 ms. This value corresponds to the injection turns of 100 for the BRing [47, 48], derived based on the emittance of 5 π mm·mrad, i.e., for the unstripped ion beams1. Meanwhile, emittance growth is inevitable when an ion beam traverses a stripper owing to small-angle scattering of the projectile ions off the target atoms. Taking account of the emittance growth during stripping, the number of injection turns for stripped ion beams cannot achieve that for unstripped ion beams; hence, the beam pulse duration of 1 ms is unnecessarily long.
To determine the beam’s appropriate pulse duration, the stripped beam’s emittance needs to be known such that the number of injection turns could be estimated correspondingly. The emittance for the beam traversing foil can be calculated by the Monte Carlo codes, such as SRIM and GEANT4. Here, the GEANT4-10.06.p02 was utilized to calculate the emittance of the stripped ion beam. In Fig. 4, we present the simulated beam distributions in the horizontal/vertical phase space for the U beam just exiting the C-foil stripper of 1 mg/cm2 calculated with GEANT4 and that for the beam just before the stripper.
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As stated in Refs. [1] and [28], the two-plane painting injection scheme will be applied for the BRing, in which the number of injection turns can be estimated by the following empirical equation [49-51].
The injection turn number for the stripped U beam is much lower than the designed value due to the unavoidable emittance growth during stripping. Comparing the phase space distributions before and after stripping, one can find that there is nearly no change in the beam envelope and that the emittance growth is completely dominated by the increase of the beam divergence. It is easy to understand: the stripper thickness is too thin to demonstrate the change of the particle transverse positions, while the angle straggling due to the small-angel scattering superposed on the initial beam angular spread makes the change of the beam divergence non-negligible. Thus, the angular spread and the emittance of the stripped beams can be calculated with the following analytic expressions.
Substituting Eq. (13) into Eq. (11), one can get the necessary beam pulse duration for injecting the stripped ions as follows.
Some factors are ignored in the above discussion, such as the dependence of the heat capacity and the heat conduction on the temperature, the change of the temperature gradient due to the change of the beam size, and the high-order terms in Eq. (7). Nevertheless, the particle number injected into the ring can be estimated roughly by combining Eqs. (14) and (15).
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It must be emphasized that the plots in Fig. 5 are only utilized to quickly evaluate the working points: for a certain beam size, how much will the emittance be after stripping and how many stripped ions can be injected into the ring roughly? In calculating the injected particle number, the beam loss along the beamline from the stripper to the injection point and during the injection was not considered. Therefore, to get the accurate number of particles that can be accumulated in the ring, detailed simulation and optimization procedures, such as the work in Refs. [47] and [53], are needed.
Except for the accumulated ion number in the ring, the accurate foil temperature must also be calculated with the thermal analysis presented in Sect. 5.2. Here, we choose two beam sizes: one is the smallest size presented in Fig. 5, 1 mm, and the other is the beam size of 1.89 mm, with which the highest tolerable beam intensity achieves 1 emA. The temperature evolution at the hot spot simulated by Ansys for these two U beam sizes is presented in Fig. 6 (a) with their respective highest tolerable beam intensities indicated in the legends and the corresponding emittances after stripping, injection turn numbers, beam pulse durations, and injected particle numbers listed in Table 3. With the temperature evolution, the evaporation rate at the hot spot averaged over one second, i.e., the repetition period of the beam pulses, is 6 × 10-9 (μg/cm2)/s for both beam sizes, because the temperature evolution in the two cases is the same. However, the peak temperature is slightly different.
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Ion species | rms beam size (mm) | Emittance after stripping (6rms)(π mm·mrad) | Number of injection turns | Beam pulse duration(μs) | Average beam intensity on stripper (enA) | Number of injected ions(×1010) | Maximum temperature(K) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
U | 1.0 | 7.67 | 42 | 429 | 69 | 0.24 | 2134.7 |
1.89 | 10.10 | 24 | 245 | 245 | 0.86 | 2182 | |
Xe | 1.0 | 6.89 | 52 | 400 | 148 | 0.67 | 2175.8 |
1.54 | 7.39 | 45 | 346 | 346 | 1.6 | 2164.7 | |
Kr | 1.0 | 6.96 | 51 | 412 | 198 | 3.2 | 2155.4 |
1.35 | 7.28 | 47 | 380 | 380 | 6.2 | 2172.6 |
Similarly, the dependence of the corresponding parameters on the beam size was also derived for the Xe and Kr beams and plotted in Figs. 5 (b) and (c). The temperature evolution at the hot spot for two beam sizes for each ion species is presented in Figs. 6 (b) and (c). The corresponding parameters for these two beam sizes are listed in Table 3.
With the beam parameters in Table 3, the foil lifetime due to radiation damages calculated by LISE++ is 25.85, 622.35, and 2110.94 hrs for U, Xe and Kr beams. The results for the two beam sizes are the same because the averaged particle flux density is nearly the same in the two cases.
Summary and discussion
A C-foil stripper is planned to be utilized to strip ions to higher charge states at the injection beamline to the BRing when higher beam energy from the ring is desired. The key parameters of the stripped beams, such as the charge state distributions, the energy losses, and the energy distributions, were simulated for the typical heavy ion species. When a closed shell or subshell electron configuration is encountered during stripping, it will take extraordinary foil thickness to get the equilibrium charge state, causing excessive energy loss, energy straggling, and emittance growth. In this case, a much thinner foil thickness is adopted instead of equilibrium thickness as the choice for Xe and Kr beams. This results in higher stripping efficiency and much better beam quality on a tradeoff of only one or two lower charge states.
Except for the conflict between the stripped charge state and the stripping efficiency, there is a much more complicated situation involving foil temperature, emittance growth during stripping, and even the injection turn number of the ring. Simply put, the beam with a larger beam size is favorable considering the heating of the foil by the beam. In contrast, such a beam will suffer more considerable emittance growth due to stripping, and consequently, the injection turn number into the ring decreases dramatically. To work out a compromise between the lifetime of the foil and the number of injection turns, an analytic approach has been developed and can be utilized to evaluate all the parameters correlated to the beam size conveniently. Given the constraint on the foil temperature, 2200 K, and the designed beam intensity of the iLinac, 1 emA, the number of the injected ions into the ring is much smaller for stripped ions than that for unstripped ions, especially in the case of very heavy ions, owing to the lower stripping efficiency, the lower specific energy and the thicker stripper foil they need. For example, the number of the injected U79+ ions is lower by more than one order of magnitude compared with the number of the injected U35+ ions.
Because the emittance growth during stripping is non-negligible, elaborate calculations and optimization are needed to transport and inject the stripped ion beams. The results presented here can be utilized for these purposes.
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