Recent developments in the Thomson Parabola Spectrometer diagnostic for laser-driven multi-species ion sources

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Published 13 October 2016 © 2016 IOP Publishing Ltd and Sissa Medialab srl
, , 4th International Conference Frontiers in Diagnostics Fix Technologies (ICFDT4) Citation A. Alejo et al 2016 JINST 11 C10005 DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/11/10/C10005

1748-0221/11/10/C10005

Abstract

Ongoing developments in laser-driven ion acceleration warrant appropriate modifications to the standard Thomson Parabola Spectrometer (TPS) arrangement in order to match the diagnostic requirements associated to the particular and distinctive properties of laser-accelerated beams. Here we present an overview of recent developments by our group of the TPS diagnostic aimed to enhance the capability of diagnosing multi-species high-energy ion beams. In order to facilitate discrimination between ions with same Z/A, a recursive differential filtering technique was implemented at the TPS detector in order to allow only one of the overlapping ion species to reach the detector, across the entire energy range detectable by the TPS. In order to mitigate the issue of overlapping ion traces towards the higher energy part of the spectrum, an extended, trapezoidal electric plates design was envisaged, followed by its experimental demonstration. The design allows achieving high energy-resolution at high energies without sacrificing the lower energy part of the spectrum. Finally, a novel multi-pinhole TPS design is discussed, that would allow angularly resolved, complete spectral characterization of the high-energy, multi-species ion beams.

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10.1088/1748-0221/11/10/C10005