Abstract

The volume production of negative hydrogen ions () in plasma ion sources is based on dissociative electron attachment (DEA) to rovibrationally excited hydrogen molecules (H2), which is a two-step process requiring both, hot electrons for ionization, and vibrational excitation of the H2 and cold electrons for the formation through DEA. Traditionally ion sources relying on the volume production have been tandem-type arc discharge sources equipped with biased filament cathodes sustaining the plasma by thermionic electron emission and with a magnetic filter separating the main discharge from the formation volume. The main motivation to develop ion sources based on radiofrequency (RF) or electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) plasma discharges is to eliminate the apparent limitation of the cathode lifetime. In this paper we summarize the principles of volume production dictating the ion source design and highlight the differences between the arc discharge and RF/ECR ion sources from both, physics and technology point-of-view. Furthermore, we introduce the state-of-the-art RF and ECR volume production ion sources and review the challenges and future prospects of these yet developing technologies.

Highlights

  • Negative hydrogen ions (H−/D−) play an integral role in accelerator based research and applications (H−) as well as fusion experiments utilizing neutral beam injection (D−) [1, 2]

  • The performance levels of various RF/electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) H- volume production ion sources reported in the literature are summarized in table 1

  • The values summarized in table 1 indicate that ion sources based on ECR-driven plasmas outperform those based on inductive RF-disharges

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Summary

13 October 2016

100871, People’s Republic of China 3 Corresponding author of sections 1–5 and 7. 4 Corresponding author of section 6. 100871, People’s Republic of China 3 Corresponding author of sections 1–5 and 7. Original content from this Keywords: negative ion source, dissociative electron attachment, radiofrequency plasma discharge, electron cyclotron resonance work may be used under the terms of the Creative

Introduction
Electron heating in RF and ECR discharges
Mechanical design of RF and ECR H- volume production sources
RF H- ion sources
CW RF H- volume production ion sources
The PKU prototype H- ion source
Improved versions of the PKU H- ion source
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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