Abstract

<p indent="0mm">Electrostatic accelerators are powerful tools in many research fields, such as nuclear physics, materials science, and archaeology. Three electrostatic accelerators, the 1.7 MV tandem, the single stage Van de Graaff with a terminal voltage of 4.5 MV, and the EN tandem with a terminal voltage of 6 MV, were installed in 1980s and have been put into operation since the early 1990s at Peking University. The 1.7 MV tandem accelerator is equipped with a radio frequency charge exchange negative ion source and a cesium sputtering negative ion source, which can produce most of the ions from H to Au. It accelerates the ions to energies from several hundreds of keV to several MeV. The accelerator is used for ion irradiation, ion beam modification of materials, as well as ion beam analysis (IBA), such as Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy (RBS) and channeling. Many significant achievements have been made by using the ion irradiation beamline, especially in the research of nuclear materials. The superlattice steel containing a high density of B2-ordered Ni(Al, Fe) superlattice nanoprecipitates (NPs) was irradiated with <sc>6 MeV</sc> Au ions at different high temperatures. The superlattice steel exhibits extraordinary radiation tolerance, namely, zero void swelling at 400–600°C under an average radiation damage of up to <sc>2350 dpa,</sc> outperforming most of the other steels studied to date. This paper demonstrates a counterintuitive strategy to enhance the radiation resistance of metallic materials by simply ordered superlattice NPs. For the 4.5 MV electrostatic accelerator, the isotope ions of hydrogen or helium can be produced in the energy range of <sc>0.7–3.8 MeV,</sc> and continuous or pulsed quasi-monoenergetic neutron fields <sc>(0.03–7 MeV,</sc> <sc>14–19 MeV)</sc> can be generated by ion beam bombarding targets. The neutron fields have applied it to measure (n, α) reaction cross section. Based on the 4.5 MV electrostatic accelerator, a total-IBA system has been established. Total-IBA can obtain self-consistency results through analyzing spectra of different emission particles, without massive modification of equipment. RBS-nuclear reaction analysis (NRA)-particle-induced X-ray emission analysis (PIXE) integrated IBA experiment was carried out to study a Fe-based alloy. The incident particle is <sup>3</sup>He<sup>+</sup> under <sc>3.0 MeV.</sc> The integrated charge is obtained by fitting the RBS spectrum. The content and depth distribution of C element can be determined by analyzing the NRA spectrum. The signal of O element can also be observed in the NRA spectrum, and its depth distribution can be obtained by fitting RBS. More than ten trace elements are analyzed by PIXE, and P has the lowest content, which is <sc>158.2 ppm.</sc> The 6 MV EN tandem accelerator, which has supported much basic and application research at Peking University, was transferred from Oxford University, UK. It is suitable for accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS), ion irradiation and ion beam analysis. The accelerator can also be applied for detector calibration. CR-39 nuclear track detectors were irradiated by <sc>3–8 MeV</sc> mono-energetic protons and <sc>6–30 MeV</sc> mono-energetic carbon ions, which were produced by the 6 MV tandem accelerator. The relationships between particle energy and orbital diameter in CR-39 detectors are established. These data on CR-39 detectors will be useful for identifying reaction products in laser-plasma experiments with complex conditions. With the technique development such as modern ion beam analysis technology and multi-beam to one target, more attractive applications are expected.

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