Jingfeng Zhang
Peking University
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Featured researches published by Jingfeng Zhang.
Chinese Physics B | 2017
Wenbin Wu; Haitao Ren; Shixiang Peng; Yuan Xu; Jiamei Wen; Jiang Sun; Ailin Zhang; Tao Zhang; Jingfeng Zhang; Jiaer Chen
Optical emission spectroscopy (OES), as a simple in situ method without disturbing the plasma, has been performed for the plasma diagnosis of a 2.45 GHz permanent magnet electron cyclotron resonance (PMECR) ion source at Peking University (PKU). A spectrum measurement platform has been set up with the quartz-chamber electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) ion source [Patent Number: ZL 201110026605.4] and experiments were carried out recently. The electron temperature and electron density inside the ECR plasma chamber have been measured with the method of line intensity ratio of noble gas. Hydrogen plasma processes inside the discharge chamber are discussed based on the diagnostic results. What is more, the superiority of the method of line intensity ratio of noble gas is indicated with a comparison to line intensity ratio of hydrogen. Details will be presented in this paper.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
Ailin Zhang; Shixiang Peng; Haitao Ren; Tao Zhang; Jingfeng Zhang; Yizhuang Xu; Z. Y. Guo; Jun Chen
Negative hydrogen ion beam can be compensated by the trapping of ions into the beam potential. When the beam propagates through a neutral gas, these ions arise due to gas ionization by the beam ions. However, the high neutral gas pressure may cause serious negative hydrogen ion beam loss, while low neutral gas pressure may lead to ion-ion instability and decompensation. To better understand the space charge compensation processes within a negative hydrogen beam, experimental study and numerical simulation were carried out at Peking University (PKU). The simulation code for negative hydrogen ion beam is improved from a 2D particle-in-cell-Monte Carlo collision code which has been successfully applied to H(+) beam compensated with Ar gas. Impacts among ions, electrons, and neutral gases in negative hydrogen beam compensation processes are carefully treated. The results of the beam simulations were compared with current and emittance measurements of an H(-) beam from a 2.45 GHz microwave driven H(-) ion source in PKU. Compensation gas was injected directly into the beam transport region to modify the space charge compensation degree. The experimental results were in good agreement with the simulation results.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
Shixiang Peng; Tao Zhang; Haitao Ren; Ailin Zhang; Yizhuang Xu; Jingfeng Zhang; Z. Y. Guo; J. E. Chen
Microwave driven cesium-free volume H(-) sources, that have the ability to deliver tens of mA H(-) at 35 keV both in CW and 10% duty factor (100 Hz/1 ms), were developed at Peking University (PKU) [S. X. Peng et al., in Proceeding of IPAC 2015, WEPWA027, Richmond, Virginia, USA, 3-8 May 2015]. Recently, special efforts were paid on the investigation of duty factor variation possibility from 1% to 100% with them. Most of the experiments were carried out with a pulsed length (τ) of 1 ms and different intervals of 99 ms, 49 ms, 39 ms, 29 ms, 19 ms, 9 ms, 4 ms, 2 ms, 1 ms, 0.5 ms, and 0 ms, respectively. Other experiments were focused on CW operation and fixed duty factor of 1%. Experimental results prove that PKU H(-) sources can deliver tens of mA H(-) at duty factor from 1% to 100%. The RF power efficiency increases steadily with the increasing of duty factor from 1% to CW at a fixed pulsed length. Under a given duty factor and pulsed length, RF power efficiency keeps constant and the H(-) current increases with RF power linearly. Details will be presented in the paper.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
Shixiang Peng; Ailin Zhang; Haitao Ren; Tao Zhang; Jingfeng Zhang; Yizhuang Xu; Z. Y. Guo; J. E. Chen
In order to improve the source stability, a long term continuous wave (CW) proton beam experiment has been carried out with Peking University compact permanent magnet 2.45 GHz ECR ion source (PKU PMECRIS). Before such an experiment a lot of improvements and modifications were completed on the source body, the Faraday cup and the PKU ion source test bench. At the beginning of 2015, a continuous operation of PKU PMECRIS for 306 h with more than 50 mA CW beam was carried out after success of many short term tests. No plasma generator failure or high voltage breakdown was observed during that running period and the proton source reliability is near 100%. Total beam availability, which is defined as 35-keV beam-on time divided by elapsed time, was higher than 99% [S. X. Peng et al., Chin. Phys. B 24(7), 075203 (2015)]. A re-inspection was performed after another additional 100 h operation (counting time) and no obvious sign of component failure was observed. Counting the previous source testing time together, this PMECRs longevity is now demonstrated to be greater than 460 h. This paper is mainly concentrated on the improvements for this long term experiment.
57th ICFA Advanced Beam Dynamics Workshop on High-Intensity and High-Brightness Hadron Beams (HB'16), Malmö, Sweden, July 3-8, 2016 | 2016
Shixiang Peng; Jiaer Chen; Z. Y. Guo; Haitao Ren; Jiamei Wen; Wenbin Wu; Yuan Xu; Ailin Zhang; Jingfeng Zhang; Tao Zhang
To better understand the space charge compensation processes in low energy high intensity beam transportation, numerical simulation and experimental study on H beam and H beam were carried out at Peking University (PKU). The numerical simulation is done with a PICMCC model [1] whose computing framework was done with the 3D MATLAB PIC code bender [2], and the impacts among particles were done with Monte Carlo collision via null-collision method. Issues, such as beam loss caused by collisions in H, H beam and ion-electron instability related to decompensation and overcompensation in H beam, are carefully treated in this model. The experiments were performed on PKU ion source test bench. Compensation gases were injected directly into the beam transportation region to modify the space charge compensation degree. The results obtained during the experiment are agree well with the numerical simulation ones for both H beam [1] and H beam [1]. Details will be presented in this paper.
Science China-physics Mechanics & Astronomy | 2017
Yuan Xu; Shixiang Peng; Haitao Ren; Jiamei Wen; Ailin Zhang; Tao Zhang; Jingfeng Zhang; Wenbin Wu; Z. Y. Guo; Jiaer Chen
Surface & Coatings Technology | 2016
Jingfeng Zhang; Shixiang Peng; Ailin Zhang; Jiamei Wen; Tao Zhang; Yuan Xu; Sha Yan; Haitao Ren
Science China-physics Mechanics & Astronomy | 2018
Wenbin Wu; Haitao Ren; Shixiang Peng; Yuan Xu; Jiamei Wen; Tao Zhang; Jingfeng Zhang; Ailin Zhang; Jiang Sun; Z. Y. Guo; Jiaer Chen
Archive | 2018
Jingfeng Zhang; Shixiang Peng; Haitao Ren; Yuan Xu; Ailin Zhang; Tao Zhang; Wenbin Wu; Jiamei Wen; Z. Y. Guo; J. E. Chen
Chinese Physics B | 2018
Tao Zhang; Shixiang Peng; Wenbin Wu; Haitao Ren; Jingfeng Zhang; Jiamei Wen; Teng-Hao Ma; Yao-Xiang Jiang; Jiang Sun; Z. Y. Guo; Jiaer Chen