Synopsis

A Liquid Method to Prepare Ion Beams

Physics 15, s66
A liquid-metal jet can strip electrons from a high-intensity, accelerator-based ion beam, increasing the beam’s charge and enhancing accelerator performance.
FRIBComm/CC BY-SA 4.0/Wikimedia Commons

This month, experiments started at Michigan State University’s Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB). FRIB has an accelerator that propels atoms at half the speed of light, smashing them on a target that produces rare isotopes (see Research News: Rare Isotopes for the Choosing). To enable such a machine to effectively deliver high-power ion beams, a section of the pipe guiding the beam is intersected by a solid film that removes electrons from the ion beam. This removal increases the beam’s charge state, improving its acceleration efficiency. The charge-stripping material, however, can be degraded by the ion beams. Now, Takuji Kanemura and his colleagues at FRIB report on the success of an alternative charge-stripping method being used at FRIB, which they say overcomes the limitations of other charge-stripping techniques [1].

The new method uses a thin-film jet of liquid lithium to strip the beam’s charge. The initial 0.5-mm-diameter jet is spread out into a 1020-𝜇m-thick, 1-cm-wide film that flows directly across the path of the ion beam at a speed of 50 m/s. After the FRIB’s 20-MeV-per-nucleon uranium ion beam strikes the jet, the beam’s average charge state doubles to 73.7, the value needed for optimal acceleration. The jet remains hydrodynamically stable.

In tests, Kanemura and his colleagues show that their charge-stripping jet can match the performance of a traditional solid charge stripper, which has a charge state of up to 76.9. The jet also undergoes no degradation, increasing the charge stripper’s lifetime indefinitely.

–Rachel Berkowitz

Rachel Berkowitz is a Corresponding Editor for Physics Magazine based in Vancouver, Canada.

References

  1. T. Kanemura et al., “Experimental demonstration of the thin-film liquid-metal jet as a charge stripper,” Phys. Rev. Lett. 128, 212301 (2022).

Subject Areas

Nuclear PhysicsAtomic and Molecular Physics

Related Articles

Seeing Collisions in Cold Molecular Clouds
Atomic and Molecular Physics

Seeing Collisions in Cold Molecular Clouds

Dense ensembles of laser-cooled molecules allow the observation of molecular collisions—a result that could lead to applications of cold molecular gases in quantum simulation and fundamental physics tests. Read More »

Probing Liquid Water’s Structure with Attosecond X-Ray Pulses
Condensed Matter Physics

Probing Liquid Water’s Structure with Attosecond X-Ray Pulses

Using an ultrafast technique, researchers shed light on how the hydrogen-bonded structure of water is reflected in its x-ray spectrum. Read More »

Nuclear Physics from Particle Physics
Particles and Fields

Nuclear Physics from Particle Physics

A new theoretical analysis connects the results of high-energy particle experiments at the Large Hadron Collider with three-proton correlations inside nuclei. Read More »

More Articles