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Developments on FRIB separator ion-transport simulations Mauricio Portillo 2010 Dec 16

Developments on FRIB separator ion-transport simulations Mauricio Portillo 2010 Dec 16. Outline. Short intro to the codes being used to develop and evaluate FRIB separator designs Short review of the current FRIB separator design multiple stage separation

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Developments on FRIB separator ion-transport simulations Mauricio Portillo 2010 Dec 16

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  1. Developments on FRIB separator ion-transport simulationsMauricio Portillo2010 Dec 16

  2. Outline • Short intro to the codes being used to develop and evaluate FRIB separator designs • Short review of the current FRIB separator design • multiple stage separation • momentum compression in preseparator • position of beam dump • Examples of calculations that are being used in the design • Higher order correction • Higher order wedge shaping • Power distribution for beam dump design Slide 2

  3. Overview of Codes • Ion Optics • GICOSY (map calculation up to 5th order) • COSY (map calculation to arbitrary order, in principal) • Map-based particle transport • COSY (transport and interaction with matter, Monte Carlo) • LISE++ (1st order convolution & projectile transport via Taylor maps, higher order Monte Carlo) • MOCADI (Up to 3rd order projectile transport and interaction with matter, Monte Carlo) • Beam/matter interaction • Atomic interactions (ATIMA, GLOBAL) • Nuclear interactions (EPAX, MCNPX, various reaction kinematics and cross section models in LISE++) note: Production in wedge is selectable by flag in LISE++ and COSY (MOCADI?)

  4. Primary Beam Comparison: NSCL to FRIB Note: NSCL rates taken from NSCL beam list.

  5. FRIB 3 Stage Separator Concept Acceptance goal am, bm = ±40 mrad 10% dp/p

  6. First Order Ion-Optical Layout of Three Stage Separator 90º rot Wedge2 Wedge1 Wedge3 Order1 Ray properties xm, ym = ±0.5 mrad am, bm = ±40 mrad dPm = +5%, 0, -5% Order 1

  7. Preseparator (Stage1) Design:Optimizing for Momentum-compression Maximum rigidity: 8 T-m x vs s y vs s Ray properties xm, ym = ±0.5 mrad am, bm = ±40 mrad dPm = +5%, 0, -5% Wedge1 position 1:3 ratio in dispersion for 1/3 dp-compression 40 ft

  8. Effect of Momentum Compression in the Preseparator • LISE and COSY calculations of compression of a 160 MeV/u 77Ni beam A1900 with no compression Counts [arb.units] FRIB Stage1 momentum spread reduced by ~3 x’=±100 mrad Resulting emittance growth in dispersive plane by ~3 x=±20 mm L. Bandura, B. Erdelyi, M. Hausmann, T. Kubo, J. Nolen, M. Portillo, B.M. Sherrill, “Fragment separator momentum compression schemes, NIMA (under publication) Slide 8

  9. Stage1: 5th order ray calculations COSY LISE with ±5% dp/p slit at beam dump x vs s ±100 mm y vs s ±100 mm Slide 9

  10. Stage1: Transmission Efficiencies Slide 10

  11. Stage1 focal plane: 5th order COSY wedge correction Effect of turning wedge shape correction Minimizing (x,d), (x,dd) and (x,ddd) with w1, w2, w3, ... dp/p% vs x Plot limits: ±3% dp/p mrad vs ±100 mm Slide 11

  12. 5th order LISE wedge correction x-rms = 14 mm Effect of turning on Order 2 wedge shaping correction x-rms = 11 mm dp/p% vs x Plot limits: ±3% dp/p mrad vs ±100 mm Slide 12

  13. 3rd order MOCADI wedge correction x-rms = 17 mm Effect of turning on Order 2 wedge shaping correction x-rms = 13 mm dp/p% vs x Slide 13

  14. Comparison of wedge optimization results • All three codes are in reasonable agreement after optimization * both LISE and MOCADI required slight adjustments • Going beyond second order shaping offers little benefit • Question1: Is it necessary and/or worth the cost to do second order shaping? • Question2: Is it practical to shape (x,d) and (x,dd) by magnet optical tuning? 0.3 micron @ 64 mm Slide 14

  15. Controlled dumping of the primary beam First dipole magnet spreads beam according to magnetic rigidity Bρ = p/q Rigidity of primary beam can differ from that of the desired exotic nucleus by ±40% beam Target Deflection range of primary beam trajectories

  16. Primary Beam on Beam Dump -38% dp/p • LISE Monte Carlo calculations are aiding in beam dump design • The power distribution plots at right illustrate an extreme case in terms of phase space and position range • Units of power are in Watts/cm2 -4% dp/p Example: Products from 287 MeV/u 18O -> C-4000 at beam dump region for various dp/p offset settings +38% dp/p

  17. Stages 2 and 3 • Post separation stages use existing A1900 magnets • A mirror symmetric arrangement is being considered • Matching in the non-dispersive plane accounts for emittance growth x vs s Maximum rigidity: 7 T-m y vs s Wedge2 Wedge2 Stage 3 Stage 3 Wedge2’ Stage 2 - Alternative

  18. Mass separation in both x- and y- planes Applying A and Z separation with at least on second wedge enhances mass separation FRIB A1900 • 78Ni 77Ni 76Ni Example y vs x mass separation plots illustrates this point

  19. Summary • Codes have been developed further in response to challenges found during FRIB work • Further developments can make design and on-line use better • Tolerance of wedge shaping will be more critical for higher dp/p acceptances

  20. Acknowlegements • Matt Amthor, Laura Bandura, Georg Bollen, Marc Hausmann, Dave Morrissey, Brad M. Sherrill, O. Tarasov and the rest of the FRIB team • Toshi Kubo, RIKEN • Jerry Nolen, ANL

  21. Vielen dank

  22. FRIB separator ray plots: Order 1 x vs s ±100 mrad vs ±10 mm a vs x y vs s b vs y

  23. FRIB separator ray plots: Order 3 x vs s ±100 mrad vs ±10 mm a vs x y vs s b vs y

  24. FRIB separator ray plots: Order 5 x vs s ±100 mrad vs ±10 mm a vs x y vs s b vs y

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