Abstract

The sputter preparation technique for thin diamond-like carbon (DLC) foils, advantageously used for ion-beam stripping and timing in accelerator experiments, has been optimized to improve the quality and the performance of the foils. Irradiation lifetimes of 5 μg/cm 2 DLC foils prepared by this technique have been compared with those for foils of approximately the same thickness, prepared by laser plasma ablation and for ethylene cracked foils when bombarded by 11 MeV Cu − - and Au −-ion beams of ∼1 μA beam current at the Heidelberg MP-tandem. Standard carbon arc-evaporated foils were used as references. In these experiments, DLC stripper foils appeared to have a mean lifetime approximately two times longer than ethylene-cracked foils regardless of ion species, and compared favorably with foils prepared by laser ablation method. All these foils lasted at least, 10 times longer than standard carbon foils, when irradiated in the MP terminal. Approximately, the same improvement factor was confirmed with 3 μg/cm 2 DLC stripper foils irradiated with 2.3 MeV Ni-beams at the Pelletron accelerator in Lund. Unlike standard carbon foils, most of the advanced lifetime foils exhibited thinning during long irradiation, under clean vacuum. This suggests that sputtering of the foil by the heavy-ion beam might be a dominant process, responsible for the observed failure of these long-lived strippers. Along with specifically corrugated self-supporting DLC beam strippers, we succeeded in the fabrication of very smooth and ultra thin (∼0.5 μg/cm 2) DLC foils, mounted on grids and used as start foils for the ToF spectrometers applied in ion beam analysis.

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