A movable Allison type emittance scanner is being developed to characterize the phase-space distribution of the beamlets of spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction, the prototype RF negative ion source of the ITER heating neutral beam injector. To test the electronics and verify the capability of the device to resolve nearby beamlets, a compact RF ion source prototype has been set up, capable of accelerating 1 mA of helium ions up to a voltage of 2 kV. A commercial 100 W RF generator creates a plasma inside a Pyrex tube, with a density between 1015 and 1016 m-3 and an electron temperature up to 15 eV. Three multi-aperture grids in accel-decel configuration extract and accelerate the ions, which are measured with a Faraday cup. We present in this paper the characterization of the ion source and its first operation, showing that it is suitable for the commissioning of the Allison scanner.
CRISP: A compact RF ion source prototype for emittance scanner testing
Poggi C.
;Sartori E.;Zuin M.;Brombin M.;Fadone M.;Fassina A.;Fincato M.;Segalini B.;Serianni G.
2020
Abstract
A movable Allison type emittance scanner is being developed to characterize the phase-space distribution of the beamlets of spectral phase interferometry for direct electric-field reconstruction, the prototype RF negative ion source of the ITER heating neutral beam injector. To test the electronics and verify the capability of the device to resolve nearby beamlets, a compact RF ion source prototype has been set up, capable of accelerating 1 mA of helium ions up to a voltage of 2 kV. A commercial 100 W RF generator creates a plasma inside a Pyrex tube, with a density between 1015 and 1016 m-3 and an electron temperature up to 15 eV. Three multi-aperture grids in accel-decel configuration extract and accelerate the ions, which are measured with a Faraday cup. We present in this paper the characterization of the ion source and its first operation, showing that it is suitable for the commissioning of the Allison scanner.Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.