Simple "Package Design" Ion Chamber Monitors for TRIUMF's Proton Beamlines Daniel Gray and Brian Minato TRIUMF, 4004 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, B.C. Canada, V6T2A3 Abstract. In the beam line designed to supply 100 uA of 500 MeV protons to the two IS AC production targets at TRIUMF, 13 profile monitor stations were required. The design allows each station to be fitted with either an air driven wire scanner module for high currents or an ionization chamber for low currents. Ring shaped multilayer G10 circuit boards were designed for the latter to enable a simple modular "gas package" that is easily serviced and aligned. These gas packages have only five basic parts, two outer window frames with 0.010 in. thick E-beam welded Al windows, two ring shaped circuit boards with 2 mm wire spacing and edge card connectors (X and Y use the same design of board) and one center frame for mounting to the inserting mechanism and holding a .001 in. Al foil. The circuit boards are critical components due to the necessity to hold vacuum along their edges. Signal traces pass from the inner part of the ring that is gas filled to the outside of the ring that is in vacuum. The windows and center foil frame are at -300 V bias. This gas package design led to a similar design used to upgrade the existing (1970's vintage) proton beamline ion chamber monitors. PROFILE MONITORS FOR THE ISAC BEAMLINE 2A Beamline Standard Profile Monitors From the TRIUMF 500 MeV cyclotron, the 2 A beamline [1] supplies up to 100 |iA of protons to the ISAC targets. Nine profile monitors are required for the main 2A beamline and 2 additional monitors in each leg supplying the 2 target stations. Two types of profile monitor are used in the 2A beamline. Both use the same drive mechanism, but they can be assembled as either an ion chamber or a wire scanner Fig. 1. The drive mechanism utilizes an air cylinder with a 6 in. stroke, end cushions and air speed controls. Motion is guided by a linear slide fitted with two guide blocks and a 6 in stroke edge welded stainless steel bellows. This monitor drive mechanism is a modification of a prototype designed and tested in 1993 [2]. CP648, Beam Instrumentation Workshop 2002: Tenth Workshop, edited by G. A. Smith and T. Russo © 2002 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0103-9/02/$19.00 439 Monitor boxes are installed at a 45° angle and have been precision manufactured to allow changing of monitor drives without realignment. Hand operated toggle clamps and alignment dowels simplify monitor removal and replacement. Monitor Station With Ion Chamber Installed Monitor Shown With Wire Scanner Head FIGURE 1. Standard 2A beamline profile monitor station. Wire Scanner Head Three signal blades (0.125 in. wide x 0.002 in. thick Be-Cu) pass through the beam at a 45° angle. Signal blades are installed so that the beam sees the 0.002 in. edge. Horizontal and vertical blades provide X and Y information. A third blade is perpendicular to the scan direction. A tomograph program generates hexagonal contours of the beam density. Each blade has two 0.005 in. diam Mo, Au plated, bias wires installed 0.2 in. away from the 0.125 in. wide faces. The bias voltage is +100V through a 10MQ current protection resistor. The signal blades and bias wires are spring tensioned. During a scan, sensing of the head position is provided by a 7 in. stroke, precision wire wound lOkQ linear potentiometer. The scan speed is set to approximately 0.3 m/s using air cylinder speed control valves. Beam current limits are set at 10 jiA due to heating of the blades or from beam trips caused by scattering. 440 GAS PACK ION CHAMBERS HEAD The standard 2A ion chambers gas packs use only 5 basic parts, two outer windows, two wire boards, and one center mounting frame Fig. 2. The chamber must be gas tight with one atmosphere of 90% Ar/10% inside and vacuum at 10~7 Torr outside. Rear Window Frame "X" Wire Board- Center Frame With Foil- Gas Plugs -"Y" Wire Board -Front Window Frame FIGURE 2. Exploded view of 2A gas pack ion chamber. The main component of the chamber is the multi-layer wire boards made from G10 Fig. 3A. The same board layout is used for X and Y; one board is reversed and rotated 90°. The wire board is actually three ring shaped 0.062 in. thick circuit boards bonded together to form a 3/16 in. sandwich. A cross section of the board is shown in Fig. 3B. Embedded in this center board are Au plated signal traces that run from 0.015 in. diam vias (plated through holes) located around the center opening in the board to the perimeter of the board. The vias are spaced to permit the installation of 32 signal wires at 2 mm spacing. Vias are used for ease of assembly and the ability to change a single wire should it become damaged. Vias also retain the wire should the solder joint soften with heat, although this is not a consideration in the 2A chambers. Signal wires used are 0.005 in. diam Mo with 5% Au plating. Au plating permits easy soldering. Traces at the perimeter of the board permit the use of a readily available edge card connector (part # 345 034 500 202). Edac Inc. manufactures the connectors from green diallyl phthalate plastic that has good radiation properties [3]. Two outer circuit boards are bonded to either side of the center board by the manufacturer using All-108 prepregs [4]. The wire boards must be bonded together with the ability to 441 hold vacuum along their edges. The outer boards have ground planes embedded within them that reduce bias leakage to the signal traces. They have exposed tabs that permit connecting the ground plane to an edge card connector trace on the center board. Exposed faces of the outer boards act as an 'O'-ring sealing surface and must be free of defects. Signal wire ^Ground Planes \ r. / U ' ———*——— ,062 Signal Traces "D* ring location Wire soldered into vias Section A-A not to scale for clarity FIGURE 3B. Cross section A-A showing multiple layers. FIGURE 3 A. Plan view of wire board with wires installed. Two outer window frames are machined from 5086 aluminum and have a 0.010 in. thick Al window electron beam welded into the center. It is important to match the alloys correctly for welding. The welding is a critical operation as it must be vacuum tight and mechanically strong. After calculating the maximum deflection of the window, 0.060 in. [5], the maximum stress on the window at the center is calculated at 15660 psi [5]. The first time the chamber is pressurized, the window plastically deforms to the 0.06 in. deflection; this increases the yield strength of the window. An 'O'-ring groove is machined into the sealing face of the frame. Each window frame has a screw-type gas purging plug set in epoxy. Care was taken when machining the gas plug holes in the frame. The holes were machined with a flat bottom that matches the end of the plug fitting. This minimizes the surface area of the epoxy exposed to the gas, reducing the out-gassing from the epoxy into the chamber. Gas plugs used are Cajon Ultra-Torr tube fittings (#SS-2-UT-A-4), with a small machined plug inserted where the 1/8 in. tube would normally be used. In the center of the chamber is a frame machined with two "O" ring grooves to enable vacuum sealing with the circuit boards. The center frame has a tab for mounting the chamber to the drive mechanism through insulating bushings. The insulating bushings enables the chamber to be biased at -300 V. In the middle of the center frame is a 0.001 in. thick 2 in. wide Al foil held in place by an Al wire ring. This foil, and the two outer windows, act as high voltage bias planes. 442 Ion Chamber "Gas Pack" Assembly and Testing Using fixtures the windows and wire boards are leak checked before assembly. After leak checking, the signal wires are tensioned to approximately 5 N and soldered into the vias. After assembly using good vacuum practices, a final leak check is performed on the entire chamber. The assembled package is placed in a vacuum chamber connected to a leak detector. Two tubes are installed into the gas plug fittings. The tubes run from the gas pack to the outside of the vacuum chamber. The vacuum chamber is evacuated and a flow of helium probe gas is passed through the inside of the gas package. A leak rate Q of 10~6 Torr 1/s or better is required. The volume Vc and the pressure PI inside the chamber is 0.136 liters and 760 Torr respectively. If the leak rate is considered to be linear, then from equation (1), the package would take t2 ~ 3.2 years to leak all its gas to the vacuum space [6]. After 6 months the pressure would be approximately 633 Torr. This meets the design specification that gas loss is less than approximately 20% in 6 months. Since gas quantity and signal gain are proportional, the monitor would still give profiles but with a 20% siginal loss. Low gas loss also lessens the reverse stress on the window when the beamline is vented to atmosphere. When in service, the chambers are routinely refilled with gas at about a 6 month interval, corresponding to TRIUMF's shutdown maintenance schedule. The gas used is 10% COz / 90% Ar; this ratio is not critical therefore a standard welding gas, "Praxair, Mig Mix Gold" [7], is used. PV PV Q=^^>t2= (l) Electronics and Operation The signal electronics is beyond the scope of this article but a simple block diagram is shown in Fig. 4. l~~~l fMonitorl I FIGURE 4. Block diagram of ion chamber electronics 443 A scanning current integrator collects signals from one 32x32 wire monitor or two 16x16 wire monitors. A CAMAC module controls the integrators gain and enable. A fiducial generator indicates wire position on an oscilloscope. A beam profile is shown in Fig. 5. Current limits are set+ at 100 nA to avoid beam trips due to excessive scattering, typical use is < 1 nA p . MULTIWIRE CHAMBER SCANS Beamline <> i + 2A O 4 PACE 1M CHELP) Monitor group <> A O B +A&B Charging time: 10 mSec 2AVM3 Peaks: 2 4 16 6 8 10 17 12 FIGURE 5. Beam profile from ion chamber ADAPTATIONS OF THE GAS PACK DESIGN Entrance Module Profile Monitors In addition to the 13 standard profile monitor stations, there is also a profile monitor in each of the Entrance Modules at the ISAC target stations. The modules have been designed with the ability to change the profile monitor sensing head to either an ion chamber or a wire scanner, using a remote handling hot cell. Sensing heads are similar to the ones used in the 2A beamline, however, they are installed onto a frame which permits interchangeability on the same monitor. The gas pack is hard wired to a plug attached to the frame. During the initial start up and low current commissioning, the first target station was fitted with an ion chamber Fig 6B. The chamber was subsequently changed to a wire scanner Fig 6A. Currently the entrance modules to both target stations are fitted with wire scanner heads. Due to design constraints the sensing heads move in and out of the beam in a vertical direction. The vertical profile is measured directly but the horizontal profile is derived from a tomograph program. 444 FIGURE 6A. Entrance module profile monitor, fitted with wire scanner head. FIGURE 6B.. Entrance module profile monitor, fitted with gas pack ion chamber. Upgrades to existing Monitors It was recently decided to upgrade the original swing style ion chamber monitors in other proton beamlines at TRIUMF. These old chambers used circuit boards with signal traces on the surface. These boards then required additional G10 boards to be epoxied to each face to provide an "O" ring sealing surface [8]. This assembly led to a high failure rate, due to gas leakage into the vacuum space. The leaks usually occurred from gaps between the epoxy and traces. The wire boards were hard wired to multiple 9 pin feed-throughs (FT) making service difficult. The chambers swing 90° in and out of the beam via an in-house fabricated ferro-fluid FT. After years of service these FT's became prone to vacuum leakage. They would have to be periodically "topped up" with ferro-fluidic fluid. The upgraded monitors have been fitted with a gas package style ion chamber of a similar design to those used in the 2A beamline. The upgraded chamber is made with circuit boards of either 16 wires at 3 mm spacing or 16 wires at 5 mm spacing. Unlike the 2A boards, a unique board is required for the X and Y. However different wire spacing can be used for X and Y in the same chamber. The drive mechanism was also upgraded. A new off the shelf ferro-fluid FT was installed and new radiation tolerant 41 pin signal FT's were also installed. The original drive motor and electronics were maintained. A prototype of the ion chamber is shown in Fig. 7A. 1AM8 an ion chamber with remote gas flow A special "gas pack" ion chamber is used on the 1AM8 monitor Fig. 7B. This monitor is under several layers of concrete shielding blocks, making regular service 445 difficult. For this reason the monitor was fitted with remote gas flow. On this installation the gas plugs were replaced with tube fittings. Metal tubes were piped to allow gas to flow through the chamber continuously. Gas flow is approximately 1 cc/min. Polyimide insulating connectors were spliced into the lines using epoxy. This allows the gas package to be electrically isolated at -300 V bias. FIGURE 7A. Prototype swing style ion chamber FIGURE 7B. 1AM8 special ion chamber with remote gas flow ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The authors would like to thank the following, G. MacKenzie, for his many years of knowledge relating to beam instrumentation, A. Hurst, for his encouragement and support, W. Rawnsley, for the electronics, J. Yandon, for vacuum related topics. G. Dennison, for the layout of circuit boards, D. Ross and the TRIUMF design office for help in preparing drawings, R. Roper and TRIUMF's machine shop, for the welded windows, T. Ries, for stress calculations. REFERENCES 1. G. M. Stinson, TRIUMF report TRI-DNA-96-05, TRIUMF, 1996. (Internal report) 2. W.R. Rawnsley, "Beam Diagnostics at TRIUMF", Beam Instrumentation Workshop, AIP Conf. Proc. 333 1994 page 125 3. NASA, SP-8053 (June 1970), Nuclear and Space Radiation Effects on Materials, Page 11 4. B. Devonald, BH Devonald and Associates, West Vancouver B.C. Canada, Email communication, April 4 2002 5. Roark's Formulas For Stress & Strain, Warren C. Young, 6th edition, MacGraw Hill, page 457 and page 477. 6. John Yandon, verbal communication. 7. Praxair Inc., Email communication, April 16 2002 8. G. Mackenzie, IEEE Trans. On Nuclear Science, NS-26, 1979, page 2316. 446
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