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The system, shown in the schematic below, will include chromatographic
systems or other sample processing devices, couplings from
these devices to the inlet of a gas-accepting ion source,
and an accelerator mass spectrometer optimized for use with
the ion source. The gas ion
source is described elsewhere.
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The center of the AMS system is a National Electrostatics
Corporation (NEC), Middleton, WI, model 1.5SDH-1 accelerator.
This accelerator has a slightly longer than normal low-energy
acceleration tube in order to handle the lower-energy, higher-emittance
ion beam coming from the gas ion source (as compared to standard
AMS Cesium sputter sources). During operation, the terminal,
or center of the accelerator, is at approximately +500
kV corresponding to the peak in the yield curve for the production
of C+ from C-. At the terminal, a tapered
gas-stripper canal, using Argon and operating at pressures
of about 30 mTorr, is used to obtain C+
from C- and to break up interfering species such
as 12CH2 and 13CH.
The stripper gas will be recirculated using two small turbomolecular
pumps. The final energy of the C+ ion beam is about 1 MeV.
The low energy magnet is made by Buckley Systems, Auckland,
New Zealand and has a bending radius of 26.8 cm and a pole
gap of 70 mm. The potential of the vacuum chamber of the analyzing
magnet is biased relative to ground to allow the three
isotopes of carbon to be injected sequentially into the accelerator
without altering the magnetic field. At the exit of the analyzing
magnet, an off-axis Faraday cup is placed along the
magnet’s focal plane at the positions of mass 12 and
mass 13. In the sequential-injection mode, this cup (plus
two similar cups after the high-energy analyzing magnet) will
allow measurement of the molecular hydride component of the
beam and also provide data required for calculation of the
transmission efficiency of the accelerator.
At the high-energy end of the accelerator, the ion beam is momentum-analyzed by a double-focusing, 90° analyzing
magnet and then energy analyzed by a double-focusing, 90°
spherical electrostatic analyzer. The magnet was made
by Danfysik, Jyllinge, Denmark and has a bending radius of
75 cm and a pole gap of 75 mm. The electrostatic analyzer
was made by NEC and has a bending radius of 75 cm and
a plate gap of 50 mm. Both the magnet and electrostatic analyzer
have stigmatic focusing properties. This combination forms
a mass-filtering achromat. At the exit of the analyzing magnet,
two off-axis Faraday cups are placed along the magnet’s
focal plane to measure 12C+
and 13C+ ion currents.
At the image point of the electrostatic analyzer, the mass-filtered
14C+ ions are measured by a solid-state,
silicon-surface-barrier
detector. On-axis Faraday cups, beam-profile monitors, beam-defining
slits, and beam-steering plates are used as needed. With the
potential exception of a focusing element at the exit of the
ion source, no lenses are used in the system (i.e., only the
inherent focusing effect of the combined elements is used).
For device control and data acquisition we primarily use National Instruments hardware and LabVIEW
software. Data acquisition includes current measurement
for the stable isotope ion beams in Faraday cups and pulse-height
analysis of the 14C ions. The data-acquisition package
is also written in LabVIEW and generates the appropriate
triggers for sample control, for the sequential-injection
mode of operation, and for system calibration.
References
M.L. Roberts, K. F. Von Reden, B.X. Han, R.J. Schneider, A Benthien, and J.M. Hayes. ‘Continuous-Flow Accelerator Mass Spectrometry’, IAEA Proceedings Series, Proceedings of an International Conference, Dubrovnik, Croatia, June 5-9, 2005, IAEA-CN-115.
B.X. Han, K. F. Von Reden, M.L. Roberts, R.J. Schneider, and J.M. Hayes, ‘3-D Electromagnetic Field Modeling and Ion Optics Calculations for a Continuous-Flow AMS System’, accepted for publication in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research B, Volume 259, Issue 1, Pages 111-117.
M.L. Roberts, R.J. Schneider, K. F. Von Reden, B.X. Han, B.E. Rosenheim, and J.M. Hayes, ‘Progress on a Gas Ion Source for Continuous-Flow Accelerator Mass Spectrometry’, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research B, Volume 259, Issue 1, Pages 83-87.
J.S.C. Wills, B.X. Han, K.F. von Reden, R.J. Schneider, M.L. Roberts, ‘Continuous-Flow Accelerator Mass Spectrometry for Radiocarbon Analysis’, accepted for publication in the proceedings of the 27th Annual Conference of the Canadian Nuclear Society, Toronto, Ontario, June 11-14, 2006.
B.X. Han, J.R. Southon, M.L. Roberts, K.F. von Reden, ‘Computer simulation of MC-SNICS for Performance Improvements’, accepted for publication in the proceedings of the 19th International Conference on the Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry, Fort Worth, Texas, August 20-25, 2006.
K.F. von Reden, M.L. Roberts, B.X. Han, R.J. Schneider, and J.S.C. Wills, ‘Searching For A Suitable Gas Ion Source for 14C Accelerator Mass Spectrometry’, submitted for publication in the proceedings of the 11th International Symposium on the Production and Neutralization of Negative Ions and Beams, Santa Fe, New Mexico, September 13-15, 2006.
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