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ISOLDE target and ion source chemistry

For the production of radioactive ion beams by means of the ISOL (isotope separation on-line) method in which the nuclei of interest are stopped in a thick target, chemistry plays a crucial role. It serves to separate the nuclear reaction products in atomic or molecular form from the bulk target and...

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Autor principal: Köster, U
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1524/ract.2001.89.11-12.749
http://cds.cern.ch/record/526080
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author Köster, U
author_facet Köster, U
author_sort Köster, U
collection CERN
description For the production of radioactive ion beams by means of the ISOL (isotope separation on-line) method in which the nuclei of interest are stopped in a thick target, chemistry plays a crucial role. It serves to separate the nuclear reaction products in atomic or molecular form from the bulk target and to transfer them efficiently to an ion source. This article gives an overview of ISOLDE radiochemical methods where targets (liquid metals, solid metals, carbides and oxides) and ion sources are optimized with respect to efficiency, speed and chemical selectivity. Rather pure beams of non-metals and volatile metals can be obtained with a temperature-controlled transfer line acting as thermo-chromatograph. For less volatile metals the temperature of the target and ion source units needs to be kept as high as possible, but a selective ion source can be used: positive surface ionization for metals with ionization potentials below about 6 eV and the RILIS (resonance ionization laser ion source) technique for most other metals.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2001
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spelling cern-5260802022-07-26T07:23:28Zdoi:10.1524/ract.2001.89.11-12.749http://cds.cern.ch/record/526080engKöster, UISOLDE target and ion source chemistryChemical Physics and ChemistryFor the production of radioactive ion beams by means of the ISOL (isotope separation on-line) method in which the nuclei of interest are stopped in a thick target, chemistry plays a crucial role. It serves to separate the nuclear reaction products in atomic or molecular form from the bulk target and to transfer them efficiently to an ion source. This article gives an overview of ISOLDE radiochemical methods where targets (liquid metals, solid metals, carbides and oxides) and ion sources are optimized with respect to efficiency, speed and chemical selectivity. Rather pure beams of non-metals and volatile metals can be obtained with a temperature-controlled transfer line acting as thermo-chromatograph. For less volatile metals the temperature of the target and ion source units needs to be kept as high as possible, but a selective ion source can be used: positive surface ionization for metals with ionization potentials below about 6 eV and the RILIS (resonance ionization laser ion source) technique for most other metals.CERN-OPEN-2001-075oai:cds.cern.ch:5260802001-01-10
spellingShingle Chemical Physics and Chemistry
Köster, U
ISOLDE target and ion source chemistry
title ISOLDE target and ion source chemistry
title_full ISOLDE target and ion source chemistry
title_fullStr ISOLDE target and ion source chemistry
title_full_unstemmed ISOLDE target and ion source chemistry
title_short ISOLDE target and ion source chemistry
title_sort isolde target and ion source chemistry
topic Chemical Physics and Chemistry
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1524/ract.2001.89.11-12.749
http://cds.cern.ch/record/526080
work_keys_str_mv AT kosteru isoldetargetandionsourcechemistry