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Issue Discussion: Accelerator Applications

Stuart Henderson Fermilab Superconducting Particle Accelerator Forum of the Americas November 13, 2012. Issue Discussion: Accelerator Applications. Particle Accelerators Impact Our Lives. Industry. Energy and Environment. Medicine. Accelerators and Beams. National Security.

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Issue Discussion: Accelerator Applications

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  1. Stuart Henderson Fermilab Superconducting Particle Accelerator Forum of the Americas November 13, 2012 Issue Discussion: Accelerator Applications

  2. Particle Accelerators Impact Our Lives Industry Energy and Environment Medicine Accelerators and Beams National Security Discovery Science

  3. Applications: Now Industry • Ion implantation • E-beam processing Medical • Cancer therapy • Medical isotope production Security • Cargo scanning/screening See “Industrial Accelerators & Their Applications”, edited by R. W. Hamm & M. E. Hamm, World Scientific Publishing, 2012. All the products that are processed, treated or inspected by particle beams have an annual value exceeding US$500B.

  4. Applications of the Future? Energy • Accelerator Driven Systems • Little or no federal interest • Needs • Very high reliability Security • THz radiation sources • Defense and detection • Needs • Compact • Multiple probes • Fieldable, rugged Industrial/Environmental • E-beam treatment of water, sewage, flue gas • Needs: • Compact and Reliable • High beam power • Energy efficient Medical • Very compact sources of electrons/x-rays/protons • Carbon therapy • Needs: • Compact machine and gantry • Controls and instrumentation

  5. Connecting the Dots: From Science to Application Feedback

  6. Discussion Topics • Jim S: “Get out of the Ivory Tower of labs and mix it up with industry” • How can IARC help you develop the next applications? • Are there other applications that are on your radar screen? • What do you see as the opportunities that can benefit from IARC and Fermilab collaboration? • How can we develop that feedback loop?

  7. S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  8. Accelerators are Essential Tools in Industry A wide-range of industrial applications makes use of accelerator-produced beams for • Semiconductor (chip) manufacturing • Cross-linking and polymerization for tires, rubber, plastics • Sterilization of medical products • Food irradiation for disinfection, extension of shelf-life or sterilization • Welding/hardening, cutting and drilling • High energy X-ray inspection Applied Materials, Inc. There are ~20,000 industrial accelerators Annual Market for industrial accelerator systems: $1.9 B Annual value of all products that make use of accelerator technology: $500B S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  9. Accelerators are Essential Tools for Medical Treatment and Diagnosis • There are ~9000 medical acceleratorsin operation in the world • Annual market for medical accelerator systems: $4 B Tens of millions of patients receive accelerator-based diagnoses and treatments each year 50 medical isotopes, used for diagnosis and treatment, are routinely produced with accelerators Siemens Eclipse Cyclotron (11 MeV) marketed for PET isotope production S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  10. Accelerators for National Security Accelerators are used for cargo scanning and “active interrogation” to detect special materials …and in Nuclear Defense: stockpile stewardship, materials characterization, radiography, and support of non-proliferation Dual Axis Radiographic Hydrodynamic Test Facility, Los Alamos S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  11. Accelerators in Discovery Science From understanding the building blocks of matter… …to the way biology works… Atomic structure of ribosomal subunit Van Gogh, Patch of Grass, 1887 …to art history… Nearly 30% of Nobel Prizes in Physics since 1939 utilized or were influenced by accelerators (39 of 141) On average accelerator-motivated research yields a Nobel Prize every 3 years 4 of last 14 Nobel Prizes in Chemistry for research utilizing accelerator facilities S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  12. What Are the Applications of the Future? S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  13. DOE Office of Science Research is Building the Foundation for Tomorrow’s Accelerator Applications S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  14. Accelerators for the Environment • Accelerators can • purify drinking water and treat waste water • disinfect sewage sludge, • clean power-plant emissions by removing NOX and SOX from flue gases with high efficiency • R&D on new technologies, such as those based on superconducting radiofrequency accelerators, may lead to better and more cost-effective approaches S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  15. Accelerators for Energy Accelerators play a pivotal role in the nation’s energy future by serving as essential tools for materials characterization at the DOE-SC user facilities Accelerators have tremendous potential – largely untapped thus far – in the Energy Sector: • Accelerator Driven Subcritical Reactors (based on superconducting particle accelerators) can transmute nuclear waste so it is much safer and simpler to store, while at the same time generating electrical power • This technology is actively pursued in Europe, China, India • Future nuclear plants require materials capable of withstanding very harsh radiation environments. Accelerator-based irradiation facilities can provide realistic test-beds • Generating electrical power from nuclear fusion by utilizing particle accelerators MYRRHA Accelerator Driven Reactor Project, Mol, Belgium S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  16. Accelerators for National Security and Defense Accelerators based on superconducting radio-frequency technology are being developed to produce high power laser beams for defense New accelerators are under development to produce “Terahertz” radiation sources for scanning Accelerator laboratories and technologies have the potential to make significant contributions to the needs of defense and security S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  17. Accelerators for Medical Applications Radioisotope production • Particle accelerators already are used to produce ~50 medical isotopes. New high power accelerators based on superconducting radio-frequency technology can be used to solve specific problems: • Tenuous supply chain for clinically relevant fission-produced radioisotopes such as 99Mo/99mTc (most commonly used radioisotope) • Production of new clinically relevant isotopes Beam therapy • Researchers are exploring the potential of carbon ion beams for cancer therapy • Higher biological effectiveness • Superior dose distribution • The U.S. does not have a carbon therapy facility, whereas several have been built oversees S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  18. Accelerators for Medical Applications There is much activity at the labs to develop new, compact types of particle accelerators which have the potential for very compact (and less expensive) sources of x-rays, electrons and protons for cancer therapy and other applications W. Leemans, LBNL One billion volt accelerator (1.3 inches long) Concept for compact proton therapy accelerator, LLNL

  19. Accelerator Technology for Discovery Science DOE-SC’s programs in accelerator R&D enable the next generation scientific user facilities that will lead to tomorrow’s discoveries 12 GeV Upgrade, TJNAF NSLS-II, BNL Next-Generation Light Source, LBNL Project X Long-Baseline Neutrino Expt. NOvA Muon to Electron Conversion

  20. Making the Connections: the Illinois Accelerator Research Center (IARC) IARC is a new facility, expected to come online in FY15, depending on funding IARC is a partnership between the DOE and State of Illinois with a mission to bring together Industry, Universities and Fermilab to develop, demonstrate and transfer accelerator technology to solve problems of national importance in medicine, industry, energy, environment, security and discovery science S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

  21. Summary • Accelerator Technology developed at the laboratories through DOE/High Energy Physics and the other SC programs will have a tremendous impact on Discovery Science • But those same breakthroughs will have a reach that goes far beyond, benefitting society in direct and tangible ways by enabling transformative approaches in medicine, energy, environment, industry and national security S. Henderson, SPAFOA, June 20, 2012

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