Abstract

Metals can be injected into electron cyclotron resonance ion sources (ECRIS) via different techniques, among which resistive ovens are used to vaporize neutral materials, later captured by the energetic plasma that will step-wise ionize them, hence giving multiply charged ion beams for accelerators. Recently, PANDORA, a novel ECR plasma trap, has been conceived to perform interdisciplinary research spanning from nuclear physics to astrophysics, where in-plasma high charge states of metallic species are demanded. However, a full knowledge on the vaporization method and on the coupling of neutral atoms with plasma and its overall dynamics is still not available. Simulations, hence, are of fundamental relevance to improve the overall efficiency, reduce consumption of rare expensive isotopes, and to improve the ion source performance. We present a numerical study about metallic species suitable for oven injection in ECRIS, focusing on metals diffusion, transport, and wall deposition under molecular flow regime. We studied the metal dynamics with and without plasma. Results underline the plasma role on a space-dependent conversion yield, reflecting the strongly inhomogeneous ECR plasma. The plasma and its parameters have been modelled using an established self-consistent particle-in-cell model. The numerical tool is conceived for the PANDORA plasma trap but can be extended to other ECR plasmas and traps. As test cases we studied the 134Cs and 48Ca radioisotopes, as metals of interest for the modern nuclear physics. A focus is given on the β-decaying 134Cs, as an application case for PANDORA, providing quantitative estimates of the γ-detection signal-poisoning effect by neutral metals deposition at the chamber wall.

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