JACoW logo

Journals of Accelerator Conferences Website (JACoW)

JACoW is a publisher in Geneva, Switzerland that publishes the proceedings of accelerator conferences held around the world by an international collaboration of editors.


BiBTeX citation export for THC1I3: The Beam Commissioning of China Accelerator for Research on Superheavy Elements

@unpublished{wang:hb2023-thc1i3,
  author       = {Z.J. Wang and W.L. Chen and Y. He},
  title        = {{The Beam Commissioning of China Accelerator for Research on Superheavy Elements}},
% booktitle    = {Proc. HB'23},
  booktitle    = {Proc. ICFA Adv. Beam Dyn. Workshop High-Intensity High-Brightness Hadron Beams (HB'23)},
  eventdate    = {2023-10-09/2023-10-13},
  language     = {english},
  intype       = {presented at the},
  series       = {ICFA Advanced Beam Dynamics Workshop on High-Intensity and High-Brightness Hadron Beams},
  number       = {68},
  venue        = {Geneva, Switzerland},
  publisher    = {JACoW Publishing, Geneva, Switzerland},
  month        = {04},
  year         = {2024},
  note         = {presented at HB'23 in Geneva, Switzerland, unpublished},
  abstract     = {{China Accelerator Facility for Superheavy Elements (CAFe2) is a state-of-the-art scientific facility dedicated to the synthesis and investigation of superheavy nuclei and elements. It features a full superconducting linear accelerator (linac) that comprises a Continuous Wave Radio-Frequency Quadrupole (CW RFQ), along with twenty-three Half-wave Resonator (HWR) cavities housed within four cryostats and an experimental terminal. The linac is designed to achieve an energy of 6.5 MeV/u for ion species with an A/Q ratio of approximately 1/3. CAFe2 evolved from its predecessor, CAFe, which was initially a proton demo linac for Accelerator-Driven Systems (ADS). Since its upgrade in 2021, CAFe2 has conducted over 2400 hours of operation, providing heavy beams for Superheavy Element (SHE) experiments. During the presentation, the focus will be on the beam commissioning activities involving high-intensity heavy beams at CAFe2.}},
}