Affiliation:
1. Neutron Beam Technology Team, RIKEN Center for Advanced Photonics, RIKEN, 2-1 Hirosawa, Wako, Saitama 351-0198, Japan
2. Institute of Innovative Research, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2 Chome-12-1 Ookayama, Meguro-ku, Tokyo 152-8550, Japan
Abstract
At RIKEN, a transportable accelerator-driven compact neutron source (RANS-III) is under development for an on-site nondestructive inspection of the degradation of old concrete and reinforcing steel. RANS-III consists of an ion source, a low-energy beam transport, a radio frequency quadrupole linear accelerator (RFQ linac), a radio frequency (RF) system, a high-energy beam transport, a target station and a neutron measurement system. Because the inner diameter of the RFQ linac is inversely proportional to the resonance frequency, the resonance frequency of the RANS-III RFQ linac in this study was chosen to be 500 MHz, which is 2.5 times that of the RANS-II RFQ linac. Therefore, the inner diameter and weight of the RANS-III RFQ linac were reduced to approximately half and one third, respectively, of those of the RANS-II RFQ linac. The RANS-III RFQ linac was designed to accelerate a proton beam with a 10 mA peak current and 100 μA average beam current from 30 keV to 2.49 MeV (Journal of Disaster Research 12(3) (2017) 585–592). Based on the evaluations, an RFQ linac for RANS-III was fabricated, and the RF characteristics of the cavity, such as the resonant frequency and electric-field distribution, were measured using a low-power test and tuned using fixed tuners. In addition, RF couplers and RF systems were constructed to inject RF power into the RANS-III RFQ linac, and RF input tests were performed.
Subject
Nuclear Energy and Engineering,Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Cited by
1 articles.
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