Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 7, 124201 (2004) [20 pages]

Electron-cloud simulation and theory for high-current heavy-ion beams

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R. H. Cohen1 *, A. Friedman1, S. M. Lund1, A. W. Molvik1, E. P. Lee1, T. Azevedo2, J.-L. Vay2, P. Stoltz3, and S. Veitzer3
1Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, P.O. Box 808, Livermore California 94550, USA
2Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
3TechX Corporation, 5621 Arapahoe Avenue, Suite A, Boulder, Colorado 80303, USA

Received 30 July 2004; published 8 December 2004

Stray electrons can arise in positive-ion accelerators for heavy-ion fusion or other applications as a result of ionization of ambient gas or gas released from walls due to halo-ion impact, or as a result of secondary-electron emission. We summarize the distinguishing features of electron-cloud issues in heavy-ion-fusion accelerators and a plan for developing a self-consistent simulation capability for heavy-ion beams and electron clouds (also applicable to other accelerators). We also present results from several ingredients in this capability. (1) We calculate the electron cloud produced by electron desorption from computed beam-ion loss, which illustrates the importance of retaining ion reflection at the walls. (2) We simulate the effect of specified electron-cloud distributions on ion beam dynamics. We consider here electron distributions with axially varying density, centroid location, or radial shape, and examine both random and sinusoidally varying perturbations. We find that amplitude variations are most effective in spoiling ion beam quality, though for sinusoidal variations which match the natural ion beam centroid oscillation or breathing-mode frequencies, the centroid and shape perturbations can also have significant impact. We identify an instability associated with a resonance between the beam-envelope “breathing” mode and the electron perturbation. We estimate its growth rate, which is moderate (compared to the reciprocal of a typical pulse duration). One conclusion from this study is that heavy-ion beams are surprisingly robust to electron clouds, compared to a priori expectations. (3) We report first results from a long-time-step algorithm for electron dynamics, which holds promise for efficient simultaneous solution of electron and ion dynamics.


©2004 The American Physical Society

URL: http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRSTAB/v7/e124201
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.7.124201
PACS: 52.59.Sa, 52.59.Fn, 52.65.Rr, 52.65.Cc

* Electronic address: rcohen@llnl.gov

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