Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8145922 | Infrared Physics & Technology | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Infrared imaging technique was used as a surface temperature-mapping tool to characterize the energy density distribution of intense pulsed ion beams on a thin metal target. The technique enables the measuring of the total ion beam energy and the energy density distribution along the cross section and allows one to optimize the operation of an ion diode and control target irradiation mode. The diagnostics was tested on the TEMP-4M accelerator at TPU, Tomsk, Russia and on the TEMP-6 accelerator at DUT, Dalian, China. The diagnostics was applied in studies of the dynamics of the target cooling in vacuum after irradiation and in the experiments with target ablation. Errors caused by the target ablation and target cooling during measurements have been analyzed. For Fluke Ti10 and Fluke Ti400 infrared cameras, the technique can achieve surface energy density sensitivity of 0.05â¯J/cm2 and spatial resolution of 1-2â¯mm. The thermal imaging diagnostics does not require expensive consumed materials. The measurement time does not exceed 0.1â¯s; therefore, this diagnostics can be used for the prompt evaluation of the energy density distribution of a pulsed ion beam and during automation of the irradiation process.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Authors
Y.I. Isakova, A.I. Pushkarev,