Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy

Measurement of ion-beam energy is important for assuring equipment operation. When an ion beam is decelerated, its energy becomes very low; the measurement of such low energy is investigated here. Low ion-beam energy has been measured using a retarding field and detector. This research, however, use...

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Main Authors: P. Thopan, D. Suwannakachorn, S. Singkarat, L. D. Yu
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84937555486&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/45834
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-458342018-01-24T06:35:16Z Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy P. Thopan D. Suwannakachorn S. Singkarat L. D. Yu Measurement of ion-beam energy is important for assuring equipment operation. When an ion beam is decelerated, its energy becomes very low; the measurement of such low energy is investigated here. Low ion-beam energy has been measured using a retarding field and detector. This research, however, used a deflecting electrostatic field, a simpler and more accurate method. The basic principle of the electrostatic-field application for measuring ion-beam energy is that when an ion beam passes through parallel plates of the electrical field, the beam will be bent from its axial trajectory as a function of the applied field. The bending distance of the ion beam can be used to determine the ion-beam energy. Results of measuring ion-beam energy in this study were compared with theory and simulation results. The SIMION program version 8.0 was used to perform the simulation. A system to measure the ion-beam energy was designed, constructed and installed. The system consisted of a pair of parallel electrode plates, a copper rod measurement piece, a vernier caliper, a stepping motor and a webcam-camera. The entire system was installed under an ion-beam deceleration lens inside the big chamber of the 30-kV bioengineering vertical ion-beam line (CMU3) at Chiang Mai University. The copper rod was moved by the stepping motor to measure the ion-beam current profile, which depended on the beam spot position. The beam profiles were compared between the plates, with and without the electrostatic field, for extracting the ion-beam bending distance and then the ion-beam energy. The ion-beam current, which was on order of 10 nA, was measured by a digital nano-ammeter. Argon ion beams at various energies, ranging from 10 to 20 keV, passed through the deceleration lens resulting in ion energy lower than 1 keV. The measurement results were in good agreement with theoretical and simulated results, demonstrating that the method worked well. 2018-01-24T06:35:16Z 2018-01-24T06:35:16Z 2014-01-01 Journal 16851994 2-s2.0-84937555486 10.12982/cmujns.2014.0062 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84937555486&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/45834
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
description Measurement of ion-beam energy is important for assuring equipment operation. When an ion beam is decelerated, its energy becomes very low; the measurement of such low energy is investigated here. Low ion-beam energy has been measured using a retarding field and detector. This research, however, used a deflecting electrostatic field, a simpler and more accurate method. The basic principle of the electrostatic-field application for measuring ion-beam energy is that when an ion beam passes through parallel plates of the electrical field, the beam will be bent from its axial trajectory as a function of the applied field. The bending distance of the ion beam can be used to determine the ion-beam energy. Results of measuring ion-beam energy in this study were compared with theory and simulation results. The SIMION program version 8.0 was used to perform the simulation. A system to measure the ion-beam energy was designed, constructed and installed. The system consisted of a pair of parallel electrode plates, a copper rod measurement piece, a vernier caliper, a stepping motor and a webcam-camera. The entire system was installed under an ion-beam deceleration lens inside the big chamber of the 30-kV bioengineering vertical ion-beam line (CMU3) at Chiang Mai University. The copper rod was moved by the stepping motor to measure the ion-beam current profile, which depended on the beam spot position. The beam profiles were compared between the plates, with and without the electrostatic field, for extracting the ion-beam bending distance and then the ion-beam energy. The ion-beam current, which was on order of 10 nA, was measured by a digital nano-ammeter. Argon ion beams at various energies, ranging from 10 to 20 keV, passed through the deceleration lens resulting in ion energy lower than 1 keV. The measurement results were in good agreement with theoretical and simulated results, demonstrating that the method worked well.
format Journal
author P. Thopan
D. Suwannakachorn
S. Singkarat
L. D. Yu
spellingShingle P. Thopan
D. Suwannakachorn
S. Singkarat
L. D. Yu
Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy
author_facet P. Thopan
D. Suwannakachorn
S. Singkarat
L. D. Yu
author_sort P. Thopan
title Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy
title_short Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy
title_full Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy
title_fullStr Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy
title_full_unstemmed Measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy
title_sort measurement of ultra-low ion-beam energy
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84937555486&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/45834
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