Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Jun 2011)

Back bombardment for dispenser and lanthanum hexaboride cathodes

  • Mahmoud Bakr,
  • R. Kinjo,
  • Y. W. Choi,
  • M. Omer,
  • K. Yoshida,
  • S. Ueda,
  • M. Takasaki,
  • K. Ishida,
  • N. Kimura,
  • T. Sonobe,
  • T. Kii,
  • K. Masuda,
  • H. Ohgaki,
  • H. Zen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.060708
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. 060708

Abstract

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The back bombardment (BB) effect limits wide usage of thermionic rf guns. The BB effect induces not only ramping-up of a cathode’s temperature and beam current, but also degradation of cavity voltage and beam energy during a macropulse. This paper presents a comparison of the BB effect for the case of dispenser tungsten-base (DC) and lanthanum hexaboride (LaB_{6}) thermionic rf gun cathodes. For each, particle simulation codes are used to simulate the BB effect and electron beam dynamics in a thermionic rf gun cathode. A semiempirical equation is also used to investigate the stopping range and deposited heat power of BB electrons in the cathode material. A numerical simulation method is used to calculate the change of the cathode temperature and current density during a single macropulse. This is done by solving two differential equations for the rf gun cavity equivalent circuit and one-dimensional thermal diffusion equation. High electron emission and small beam size are required for generation of a high-brightness electron beam, and so in this work the emission properties of the cathode are taken into account. Simulations of the BB effect show that, for a pulse of 6 μs duration, the DC cathode experiences a large change in the temperature compared with LaB_{6}, and a change in current density 6 times higher. Validation of the simulation results is performed using experimental data for beam current beyond the gun exit. The experimental data is well reproduced using the simulation method.