Title :
Laser Micromachined, Monolithic Cathodes for Cathode Priming of a Relativistic Magnetron
Author :
Jordan, N.M. ; Jones, M.C. ; Gilgenbach, R.M. ; Neculaes, V.B. ; White, W.M. ; Hoff, B.W. ; Lau, Y.Y. ; Hidaka, Y. ; Spencer, T.A. ; Price, D.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Nucl. Eng. & Rad. Sci., Michigan Univ., Ann Arbor, MI
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Experiments have been performed on a relativistic magnetron using innovative monolithic metal cathodes (Al). These new types of cathodes are fabricated utilizing KrF laser ablation of metal surfaces to enhance the local E field. Two new types of cathodes invented are: projection ablation lithography (PAL) and ablation line focused (ALF) cathodes. PAL cathodes are fabricated by ablating a demagnified-projected pattern onto the metal surface thereby creating "metal cloth", ALF cathodes use a cylindrical lens to focus the laser beam into a single line; these focused laser lines are then ablated into patterns using a stepper motor controlled with LabVIEW. A novel technique for priming N-cavity magnetrons has been invented at the University of Michigan; this technique, "cathode priming", utilizes N/2 discrete, azimuthal, electron emission regions around the cathode circumference to prebunch electrons into pi-mode symmetry. Cathode priming experiments and simulations are performed on a relativistic, 6-vane, magnetron. This magnetron is powered by the MELBA-C accelerator with parameters: 0.3 MV, 1-10 kA and 300-500 ns pulselength. Microwave start-oscillation time for PAL cathode priming decreased an average of 10 ns when compared to the unprimed case. Simulations of cathode priming have been performed using the 3D particle-in-cell, MAGIC code. These simulations show pi-mode start-up times decrease from 28 ns with no priming down to 14 ns when cathode priming is imposed. Also, 3D simulations show suppression of undesired magnetron modes (2pi/3), for effective pi-mode-locking
Keywords :
cathodes; electron emission; laser ablation; laser beam machining; magnetrons; micromachining; microwave generation; relativistic electron beam tubes; 0.3 MV; 1 to 10 kA; 300 to 500 ns; 3D particle-in-cell MAGIC code; KrF laser ablation; LabVIEW; MELBA-C accelerator; ablation line focused cathode; cathode priming; cylindrical lens; electron emission; laser micromachined cathodes; microwave start-oscillation time; monolithic metal cathodes; pi-mode symmetry; pi-mode-locking; projection ablation lithography cathode; relativistic magnetron; stepper motor; Accelerator magnets; Cathodes; Electron emission; Laser ablation; Laser beams; Lenses; Lithography; Optical control; Particle accelerators; Surface emitting lasers;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 2005. ICOPS '05. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Monterey, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9300-7
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2005.359240