Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Nicolas Chauvin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Nicolas Chauvin.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility injector acceptance tests at CEA/Saclay: 140 mA/100 keV deuteron beam characterizationa)

R. Gobin; Daniel Bogard; P. Cara; Nicolas Chauvin; Stéphane Chel; O. Delferrière; Francis Harrault; P. Mattei; A. Mosnier; Franck Senée; H. Shidara; Y. Okumura

In the framework of the ITER broader approach, the International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility (IFMIF) deuteron accelerator (2 × 125 mA at 40 MeV) is an irradiation tool dedicated to high neutron flux production for future nuclear plant material studies. During the validation phase, the Linear IFMIF Prototype Accelerator (LIPAc) machine will be tested on the Rokkasho site in Japan. This demonstrator aims to produce 125 mA/9 MeV deuteron beam. Involved in the LIPAc project for several years, specialists from CEA/Saclay designed the injector based on a SILHI type ECR source operating at 2.45 GHz and a 2 solenoid low energy beam line to produce such high intensity beam. The whole injector, equipped with its dedicated diagnostics, has been then installed and tested on the Saclay site. Before shipment from Europe to Japan, acceptance tests have been performed in November 2012 with 100 keV deuteron beam and intensity as high as 140 mA in continuous and pulsed mode. In this paper, the emittance measurements done for different duty cycles and different beam intensities will be presented as well as beam species fraction analysis. Then the reinstallation in Japan and commissioning plan on site will be reported.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Transport of intense ion beams and space charge compensation issues in low energy beam lines (invited).

Nicolas Chauvin; O. Delferrière; R. Duperrier; R. Gobin; P. A. P. Nghiem; D. Uriot

Over the last few years, the interest of the international scientific community for high power accelerators in the megawatt range has been increasing. For such machines, the ion source has to deliver a beam intensity that ranges from several tens up to a hundred of mA. One of the major challenges is to extract and transport the beam while minimizing the emittance growth and optimizing its injection into the radio frequency quadrupole. Consequently, it is crucial to perform precise simulations and cautious design of the low energy beam transport (LEBT) line. In particular, the beam dynamics calculations have to take into account not only the space charge effects but also the space charge compensation of the beam induced by ionization of the residual gas. The physical phenomena occurring in a high intensity LEBT and their possible effects on the beam are presented, with a particular emphasis on space charge compensation. Then, beam transport issues in different kind of LEBTs are briefly reviewed. The SOLMAXP particle-in-cell code dedicated to the modeling of the transport of charge particles under a space charge compensation regime is described. Finally, beam dynamics simulations results obtained with SOLMAXP are presented in the case of international fusion materials irradiation facility injector.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Operation and commissioning of IFMIF (International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility) LIPAc injector

Y. Okumura; R. Gobin; J. Knaster; R. Heidinger; Juan Marcos Ayala; Benoit Bolzon; P. Cara; Nicolas Chauvin; Stéphane Chel; Dominique Gex; Francis Harrault; R. Ichimiya; A. Ihara; Y. Ikeda; Atsushi Kasugai; T. Kikuchi; T. Kitano; Masao Komata; K. Kondo; S. Maebara; Alvaro Marqueta; Shigeru O’hira; M. Perez; G. Phillips; G. Pruneri; K. Sakamoto; F. Scantamburlo; Franck Senée; K. Shinto; M. Sugimoto

The objective of linear IFMIF prototype accelerator is to demonstrate 125 mA/CW deuterium ion beam acceleration up to 9 MeV. The injector has been developed in CEA Saclay and already demonstrated 140 mA/100 keV deuterium beam [R. Gobin et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 85, 02A918 (2014)]. The injector was disassembled and delivered to the International Fusion Energy Research Center in Rokkasho, Japan. After reassembling the injector, commissioning has started in 2014. Up to now, 100 keV/120 mA/CW hydrogen and 100 keV/90 mA/CW deuterium ion beams have been produced stably from a 10 mm diameter extraction aperture with a low beam emittance of 0.21 π mm mrad (rms, normalized). Neutron production by D-D reaction up to 2.4 × 10(9) n/s has been observed in the deuterium operation.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Preliminary results of the International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility deuteron injector

R. Gobin; G. Adroit; Daniel Bogard; Gilles Bourdelle; Nicolas Chauvin; O. Delferrière; Y. Gauthier; Patrick Girardot; P. Guiho; Francis Harrault; J.-L. Jannin; Denis Loiseau; P. Mattei; Arnaud Roger; Y. Sauce; Franck Senée; T. Vacher

In the framework of the IFMIF-EVEDA project (International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility-Engineering Validation and Engineering Design Activities), CEA∕IRFU is in charge of the design, construction, and characterization of the 140 mA continuous deuteron injector, including the source and the low energy beam line. The electron cyclotron resonance ion source which operates at 2.45 GHz is associated with a 4-electrode extraction system in order to minimize beam divergence at the source exit. Krypton gas injection is foreseen in the 2-solenoid low energy beam line. Such Kr injection will allow reaching a high level of space charge compensation in order to improve the beam matching at the radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ) entrance. The injector construction is now completed on the Saclay site and the first plasma and beam production has been produced in May 2011. This installation will be tested with proton and deuteron beams either in pulsed or continuous mode at Saclay before shipping to Japan. In this paper, after a brief description of the installation, the preliminary results obtained with hydrogen gas injection into the plasma chamber will be reported.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Installation and first operation of the International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility injector at the Rokkasho site

R. Gobin; Daniel Bogard; Benoit Bolzon; Gilles Bourdelle; Nicolas Chauvin; Stéphane Chel; Patrick Girardot; Adelino Gomes; Patrice Guiho; Francis Harrault; Denis Loiseau; Yves Lussignol; Nicolas Misiara; Arnaud Roger; Franck Senée; Matthieu Valette; P. Cara; Daniel Duglué; Dominique Gex; Y. Okumura; Juan Marcos Ayala; J. Knaster; Alvaro Marqueta; Atsushi Kasugai; Shigeru O’hira; K. Shinto; Hiroki Takahashi

The International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility (IFMIF) linear IFMIF prototype accelerator injector dedicated to high intensity deuteron beam production has been designed, built, and tested at CEA/Saclay between 2008 and 2012. After the completion of the acceptance tests at Saclay, the injector has been fully sent to Japan. The re-assembly of the injector has been performed between March and May 2014. Then after the check-out phase, the production of the first proton beam occurred in November 2014. Hydrogen and deuteron beam commissioning is now in progress after having proceeded with the final tests on the entire injector equipment including high power diagnostics. This article reports the different phases of the injector installation pointing out the safety and security needs, as well as the first beam production results in Japan and chopper tests. Detailed operation and commissioning results (with H(+) and D(+) 100 keV beams) are reported in a second article.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Investigation of ion beam space charge compensation with a 4-grid analyzer.

C. Ullmann; A. Adonin; R. Berezov; Nicolas Chauvin; Olivier Delferriere; J. Fils; R. Hollinger; O. Kester; Franck Senée; Olivier Tuske

Experiments to investigate the space charge compensation of pulsed high-current heavy ion beams are performed at the GSI ion source text benches with a 4-grid analyzer provided by CEA/Saclay. The technical design of the 4-grid analyzer is revised to verify its functionality for measurements at pulsed high-current heavy ion beams. The experimental investigation of space charge compensation processes is needed to increase the performance and quality of current and future accelerator facilities. Measurements are performed directly downstream a triode extraction system mounted to a multi-cusp ion source at a high-current test bench as well as downstream the post-acceleration system of the high-current test injector (HOSTI) with ion energies up to 120 keV/u for helium and argon. At HOSTI, a cold or hot reflex discharge ion source is used to change the conditions for the measurements. The measurements were performed with helium, argon, and xenon and are presented. Results from measurements with single aperture extraction systems are shown.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2018

Commissioning of the ECR ion source of the high intensity proton injector of the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR)

Olivier Tuske; Nicolas Chauvin; Olivier Delferriere; J. Fils; Y. Gauthier

The CEA at Saclay is in charge of developing and building the ion source and the low energy line of the proton linac of the FAIR (Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research) accelerator complex located at GSI (Darmstadt) in Germany. The FAIR facility will deliver stable and rare isotope beams covering a huge range of intensities and beam energies for experiments in the fields of atomic physics, plasma physics, nuclear physics, hadron physics, nuclear matter physics, material physics, and biophysics. A significant part of the experimental program at FAIR is dedicated to antiproton physics that requires an ultimate number 7 × 1010 cooled pbar/h. The high-intensity proton beam that is necessary for antiproton production will be delivered by a dedicated 75 mA/70 MeV proton linac. A 2.45 GHz microwave ion source will deliver a 100 mA H+ beam pulsed at 4 Hz with an energy of 95 keV. A 2 solenoids low energy beam transport line allows the injection of the proton beam into the radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ) within an acceptance of 0.3π mm mrad (norm. rms). An electrostatic chopper system located between the second solenoid and the RFQ is used to cut the beam macro-pulse from the source to inject 36 μs long beam pulses into the RFQ. At present time, a Ladder-RFQ is under construction at the University of Frankfurt. This article reports the first beam measurements obtained since mid of 2016. Proton beams have been extracted from the ECR ion source and analyzed just after the extraction column on a dedicated diagnostic chamber. Emittance measurements as well as extracted current and species proportion analysis have been performed in different configurations of ion source parameters, such as magnetic field profile, radio frequency power, gas injection, and puller electrode voltage.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Measurement of ion species in high current ECR H+/D+ ion source for IFMIF (International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility)

K. Shinto; Franck Senée; Juan Marcos Ayala; Benoit Bolzon; Nicolas Chauvin; R. Gobin; R. Ichimiya; A. Ihara; Y. Ikeda; Atsushi Kasugai; T. Kitano; K. Kondo; Alvaro Marqueta; Y. Okumura; Hiroki Takahashi; Matthieu Valette

Ion species ratio of high current positive hydrogen/deuterium ion beams extracted from an electron-cyclotron-resonance ion source for International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility accelerator was measured by the Doppler shift Balmer-α line spectroscopy. The proton (H(+)) ratio at the middle of the low energy beam transport reached 80% at the hydrogen ion beam extraction of 100 keV/160 mA and the deuteron (D(+)) ratio reached 75% at the deuterium ion beam extraction of 100 keV/113 mA. It is found that the H(+) ratio measured by the spectroscopy gives lower than that derived from the phase-space diagram measured by an Allison scanner type emittance monitor. The H(+)/D(+) ratio estimated by the emittance monitor was more than 90% at those extraction currents.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

High intensity proton injector for facility of antiproton and ion research

R. Berezov; R. Brodhage; Nicolas Chauvin; Olivier Delferriere; J. Fils; R. Hollinger; V. Ivanova; Olivier Tuske; C. Ullmann

The high current ion source with the low energy beam transport (LEBT) will serve as injector into the proton LINAC to provide primary proton beam for the production of antiprotons. The pulsed ion source developed and built in CEA/Saclay operates with a frequency of 2.45 GHz based on ECR plasma production with two coils with 87.5 mT magnetic field necessary for the electron cyclotron resonance. The compact LEBT consists of two solenoids with a maximum magnetic field of 500 mT including two integrated magnetic steerers to adjust the horizontal and vertical beam positions. The total length of the compact LEBT is 2.3 m and was made as short as possible to reduced emittance growth along the beam line. To measure ion beam intensity behind the pentode extraction system, between solenoids and at the end of the beam line, two current transformers and a Faraday cup are installed. To get information about the beam quality and position, the diagnostic chamber with different equipment will be installed between the two solenoids. This article reports the current status of the proton injector for the facility of antiproton and ion research.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

The proton injector for the accelerator facility of antiproton and ion research (FAIR).

C. Ullmann; R. Berezov; J. Fils; Nicolas Chauvin; Olivier Delferriere; R. Hollinger; O. Kester; W. Vinzenz

The new international accelerator facility for antiproton and ion research (FAIR) at GSI in Darmstadt, Germany, is one of the largest research projects worldwide and will provide an antiproton production rate of 7 × 10(10) cooled pbars per hour. This is equivalent to a primary proton beam current of 2 × 10(16) protons per hour. For this request a high intensity proton linac (p-linac) will be built with an operating rf-frequency of 325 MHz to accelerate a 35 mA proton beam at 70 MeV, using conducting crossed-bar H-cavities. The repetition rate is 4 Hz with beam pulse length of 36 μs. The microwave ion source and low energy beam transport developed within a joint French-German collaboration GSI/CEA-SACLAY will serve as an injector of the compact proton linac. The 2.45 GHz ion source allows high brightness ion beams at an energy of 95 keV and will deliver a proton beam current of 100 mA at the entrance of the radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ) within an acceptance of 0.3π mm mrad (norm., rms).

Collaboration


Dive into the Nicolas Chauvin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Y. Okumura

Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Atsushi Kasugai

Japan Atomic Energy Agency

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

R. Gobin

French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Olivier Delferrière

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Sugimoto

Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Masao Komata

Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge