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Featured researches published by Y. C. Feng.


Journal of Materials Research | 2009

Determination of plastic properties by instrumented spherical indentation: Expanding cavity model and similarity solution approach

Peng Jiang; Taihua Zhang; Y. C. Feng; Rong Yang; Naigang Liang

The present paper aims to develop a robust spherical indentation-based method to extract material plastic properties. For this purpose, a new consideration of-piling-up effect is incorporated into the expanding cavity model; an extensive numerical study on the similarity Solution has also been performed. As a consequence, two semi-theoretical relations between the indentation response and material plastic properties are derived, with which plastic properties of materials can be identified from a single instrumented spherical indentation curve, the advantage being that this approach no longer needs estimations of contact radius with given elastic modulus. Moreover, the inconvenience in using multiple indenters with different tip angles can be avoided. Comprehensive sensitivity analyses show that the present algorithm is reliable. Also, by experimental verification performed oil three typical materials, good agreement of the material properties between those obtained from the reverse algorithm and experimental data is obtained.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

Advanced superconducting electron cyclotron resonance ion source SECRAL: Design, construction, and the first test result

H. W. Zhao; L. T. Sun; X. Z. Zhang; Z. M. Zhang; X. H. Guo; W. He; P. Yuan; Mingtao Song; J. Y. Li; Y. C. Feng; Y. Cao; X. X. Li; W.L. Zhan; B. Wei; D. Z. Xie

Superconducting electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) ion source with advanced design in Lanzhou (SECRAL) is a next generation ECR ion source and aims for developing a very compact superconducting ECR ion source with a structure and high performances for highly charged ion-beam production. The ion source was designed to be operated at 18GHz at initial operation and finally will be extended to 28GHz. The superconducting magnet confinement configuration of the ion source consists of three axial solenoid coils and six sextupole coils with a cold iron structure as field booster and clamping. At full excitation, this magnet assembly can produce peak mirror fields on the axis of 3.6T at injection, 2.2T at extraction, and a radial sextupole field of 2.0T at plasma chamber wall. What is different from the traditional design, such as LBNL VENUS and LNS SERSE, is that the three axial solenoid coils are located inside of the sextupole bore in order to reduce the interaction forces between the sextupole coils and the so...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2010

New development of advanced superconducting electron cyclotron resonance ion source SECRAL (invited)

H. W. Zhao; L. T. Sun; W. Lu; X. Z. Zhang; X. H. Guo; Y. Cao; H. Y. Zhao; Y. C. Feng; J. Y. Li; H. Y. Ma; Yongliang Shang; Biao Ma; H. Q. Wang; X. X. Li; D. Z. Xie

Superconducting electron cyclotron resonance ion source with advance design in Lanzhou (SECRAL) is an 18-28 GHz fully superconducting electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) ion source dedicated for highly charged heavy ion beam production. SECRAL, with an innovative superconducting magnet structure of solenoid-inside-sextupole and at lower frequency and lower rf power operation, may open a new way for developing compact and reliable high performance superconducting ECR ion source. One of the recent highlights achieved at SECRAL is that some new record beam currents for very high charge states were produced by 18 GHz or 18+14.5 GHz double frequency heating, such as 1 e microA of (129)Xe(43+), 22 e microA of (209)Bi(41+), and 1.5 e microA of (209)Bi(50+). To further enhance the performance of SECRAL, a 24 GHz/7 kW gyrotron microwave generator was installed and SECRAL was tested at 24 GHz. Some promising and exciting results at 24 GHz with new record highly charged ion beam intensities were produced, such as 455 e microA of (129)Xe(27+) and 152 e microA of (129)Xe(30+), although the commissioning time was limited within 3-4 weeks and rf power only 3-4 kW. Bremsstrahlung measurements at 24 GHz show that x-ray is much stronger with higher rf frequency, higher rf power. and higher minimum mirror magnetic field (minimum B). Preliminary emittance measurements indicate that SECRAL emittance at 24 GHz is slightly higher that at 18 GHz. SECRAL has been put into routine operation at 18 GHz for heavy ion research facility in Lanzhou (HIRFL) accelerator complex since May 2007. The total operation beam time from SECRAL for HIRFL accelerator has been more than 2000 h, and (129)Xe(27+), (78)Kr(19+), (209)Bi(31+), and (58)Ni(19+) beams were delivered. All of these new developments, the latest results, and long-term operation for the accelerator have again demonstrated that SECRAL is one of the best in the performance of ECR ion source for highly charged heavy ion beam production. Finally the future development of SECRAL will be presented.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016

Advancement of highly charged ion beam production by superconducting ECR ion source SECRAL (invited)

L. T. Sun; Jie Guo; W. Lu; Wei Zhang; Y. C. Feng; Y. Yang; C. Qian; X. Fang; H. Y. Ma; X. Z. Zhang; H. W. Zhao

At Institute of Modern Physics (IMP), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), the superconducting Electron Cyclotron Resonance (ECR) ion source SECRAL (Superconducting ECR ion source with Advanced design in Lanzhou) has been put into operation for about 10 years now. It has been the main working horse to deliver intense highly charged heavy ion beams for the accelerators. Since its first plasma at 18 GHz, R&D work towards more intense highly charged ion beam production as well as the beam quality investigation has never been stopped. When SECRAL was upgraded to its typical operation frequency 24 GHz, it had already showed its promising capacity of very intense highly charged ion beam production. And it has also provided the strong experimental support for the so called scaling laws of microwave frequency effect. However, compared to the microwave power heating efficiency at 18 GHz, 24 GHz microwave heating does not show the ω(2) scale at the same power level, which indicates that microwave power coupling at gyrotron frequency needs better understanding. In this paper, after a review of the operation status of SECRAL with regard to the beam availability and stability, the recent study of the extracted ion beam transverse coupling issues will be discussed, and the test results of the both TE01 and HE11 modes will be presented. A general comparison of the performance working with the two injection modes will be given, and a preliminary analysis will be introduced. The latest results of the production of very intense highly charged ion beams, such as 1.42 emA Ar(12+), 0.92 emA Xe(27+), and so on, will be presented.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Performance and operation of advanced superconducting electron cyclotron resonance ion source SECRAL at 24 GHz

H. W. Zhao; W. Lu; X. Z. Zhang; Y. C. Feng; Jie Guo; Y. Cao; J. Y. Li; X. H. Guo; S. Sha; L. T. Sun; D. Z. Xie

SECRAL (superconducting ECR ion source with advanced design in Lanzhou) ion source has been in routine operation for Heavy Ion Research Facility in Lanzhou (HIRFL) accelerator complex since May 2007. To further enhance the SECRAL performance in order to satisfy the increasing demand for intensive highly charged ion beams, 3-5 kW high power 24 GHz single frequency and 24 GHz +18 GHz double frequency with an aluminum plasma chamber were tested, and some exciting results were produced with quite a few new record highly charged ion beam intensities, such as (129)Xe(35+) of 64 eμA, (129)Xe(42+) of 3 eμA, (209)Bi(41+) of 50 eμA, (209)Bi(50+) of 4.3 eμA and (209)Bi(54+) of 0.2 eμA. In most cases SECRAL is operated at 18 GHz to deliver highly charged heavy ion beams for the HIRFL accelerator, only for those very high charge states and very heavy ion beams such as (209)Bi(36+) and (209)Bi(41+), SECRAL has been operated at 24 GHz. The total operation beam time provided by SECRAL up to July 2011 has exceeded 7720 hours. In this paper, the latest performance, development, and operation status of SECRAL ion source are presented. The latest results and reliable long-term operation for the HIRFL accelerator have demonstrated that SECRAL performance for production of highly charged heavy ion beams remains improving at higher RF power with optimized tuning.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

Measurements of bremsstrahlung spectra of Lanzhou ECR Ion Source No. 3 (LECR3)

H. Y. Zhao; H. W. Zhao; Xiaojun Ma; Shougang Zhang; W. T. Feng; Xiaona Zhu; Z. M. Zhang; W. He; L. T. Sun; Y. C. Feng; Yanwei Cao; Jun-Qing Li; X. X. Li; Wang H; B. H. Ma

In order to diagnose the electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) plasma, electron bremsstrahlung spectra were measured by a HPGe detector on Lanzhou ECR Ion Source No. 3 at IMP. The ion source was operated with argon under various working conditions, including different microwave power, mixing gas, extraction high voltage (HV), and so on. Some of the measured spectra are presented in this article. The dependence of energetic electron population on mixing gas and extraction HV is also described. Additionally, we are looking forward to further measurements on SECRAL (Superconducting ECR Ion Source with Advanced design at Lanzhou).


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

A novel torsion testing technique for micro-scale specimens based on electromagnetism

Yong Huan; Yujing Dai; Yaqi Shao; Guangjian Peng; Y. C. Feng; T.H. Zhang

A novel torsion apparatus for micro-scale specimens is developed based on electromagnetism, in which a coil-magnet component is used for actuating and torque measuring. When the current gets through the coil, the torque, produced by Ampere force, can be easily measured by recording the current. A laser displacement sensor is applied to measure the rotation angle. The torque is calibrated using Sartorius BP211D balance. The calibration results demonstrate there is a perfect linear relationship between the torque and the current. The torque capacity is 4.0 × 10(-4) N m with noise-floor of less than 10(-8) N m. The rotation angle capacity is 60° with noise-floor of less than 0.02°. Two sets of copper wire specimens, with diameter of 100 μm and 140 μm, are tested using this apparatus. Experimental results, with good resolution and repeatability, successfully demonstrate the effectiveness of the torsion testing technique for micro-scale specimens.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Status of the laser ion source at IMP.

S. Sha; H. W. Zhao; X. H. Guo; Zhouli Zhang; X. Fang; J. W. Guo; Wei Zhang; W. Lu; Y. Cao; H. Y. Ma; S. H. Lin; X. X. Li; Biao Ma; Y. Yang; H. Q. Wang; Q. Wu; J. Y. Li; Y. C. Feng; H. Y. Zhao; Y. H. Zhu; L. T. Sun; X. Z. Zhang; X. M. Chen; D. Z. Xie

A laser (Nd:YAG laser, 3 J, 1064 nm, 8-10 ns) ion source has been built and under development at IMP to provide pulsed high-charge-state heavy ion beams to a radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ) for upgrading the IMP accelerators with a new low-energy beam injector. The laser ion source currently operates in a direct plasma injection scheme to inject the high charge state ions produced from a solid target into the RFQ. The maximum power density on the target was about 8.4 × 10(12) W∕cm(2). The preliminary experimental results will be presented and discussed in this paper.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2002

A new ECR ion source for atomic physics research at Institute of Modern Physics

Z. M. Zhang; H. W. Zhao; X. Z. Zhang; X. H. Guo; X. X. Li; L. T. Sun; Yujing Cao; Y. C. Feng; J. Y. Li; H. L. Lei; H. Q. Wang; J. Y. Gao; B. H. Ma

A new electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) ion source (LECR3-Lanzhou Electron Cyclotron Resonance Ion Source No. 3) has been constructed this year. The main purpose of this source is to provide highly charged ion beams for atomic physics and surface physics research. The design of this ion source is based on the IMP 14.5 GHz ECR ion source (LECR2-Lanzhou Electron Cyclotron Resonance Ion Source No. 2) with double rf heating by inserting waveguide directly and aluminum chamber. Furthermore, the volume of the plasma chamber is larger than that of LECR2 so as to increase the rf power and improve beam intensity for highly charged ions. But the hexapole field on the chamber wall is kept the same value in order to compare with the performance of LECR2. After only four days conditioning the first test results were obtained. The final result of this ion source is expected to be better than LECR2s


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Development of DRAGON electron cyclotron resonance ion source at Institute of Modern Physics

W. Lu; D. Z. Xie; X. Z. Zhang; B. Xiong; L. Ruan; S. Sha; Wei Zhang; Y. Cao; S. H. Lin; Jie Guo; X. Fang; X. H. Guo; X. X. Li; H. Y. Ma; Y. Yang; Q. Wu; H. Y. Zhao; Biao Ma; H. Q. Wang; Yizhi Zhu; Y. C. Feng; J. Y. Li; J. Q. Li; L. T. Sun; H. W. Zhao

A new room temperature electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) ion source, DRAGON, is under construction at IMP. DRAGON is designed to operate at microwaves of frequencies of 14.5-18 GHz. Its axial solenoid coils are cooled with evaporative medium to provide an axial magnetic mirror field of 2.5 T at the injection and 1.4 T at the extraction, respectively. In comparison to other conventional room temperature ECR ion sources, DRAGON has so far the largest bore plasma chamber of inner diameter of 126 mm with maximum radial fields of 1.4-1.5 T produced by a non-Halbach permanent sextupole magnet.

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H. W. Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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L. T. Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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X. Z. Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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W. Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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X. H. Guo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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X. X. Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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J. Y. Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Y. Cao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Biao Ma

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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H. Y. Zhao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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