Milestone: Miniature particle accelerator works

Researchers succeed in accelerating electrons using a nano device

"For the first time, we really can speak about a particle accelerator on a 
chip," enthuses Dr. Roy Shiloh.


October 18, 2023
Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg 
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/10/231018115725.htm


Summary:

Particle accelerators are crucial tools in a wide variety of areas in industry, 
research and the medical sector. The space these machines require ranges from a 
few square meters to large research centers.

Using lasers to accelerate electrons within a photonic nanostructure 
constitutes a microscopic alternative with the potential of generating 
significantly lower costs and making devices considerably less bulky.

Now, two teams of laser physicists have just succeeded in demonstrating a 
nanophotonic electron accelerator.

FULL STORY

Particle accelerators are crucial tools in a wide variety of areas in industry, 
research and the medical sector. The space these machines require ranges from a 
few square meters to large research centers.

Using lasers to accelerate electrons within a photonic nanostructure 
constitutes a microscopic alternative with the potential of generating 
significantly lower costs and making devices considerably less bulky. Until 
now, no substantial energy gains were demonstrated. In other words, it has not 
been shown that electrons really have increased in speed significantly.

A team of laser physicists at Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg 
(FAU) has now succeeded in demonstrating the first nanophotonic electron 
accelerator -- at the same time as colleagues from Stanford University.

The researchers from FAU have now published their findings in the journal 
Nature.

When people hear "particle accelerator," most will probably think of the Large 
Hadron Collider in Geneva, the approximately 27 kilometer long ring-shaped 
tunnel which researchers from around the globe used to conduct research into 
unknown elementary particles.

Such huge particle accelerators are the exception, however. We are more likely 
to encounter them in other places in our day to day lives, for example in 
medical imaging procedures or during radiation to treat tumors.

Even then, however, the devices are several meters in size and still rather 
bulky, with room for improvement in terms of performance.

In a bid to improve and decrease the size of existing devices, physicists 
around the globe are working on dielectric laser acceleration, also known as 
nanophotonic accelerators.

The structures they use are merely 0.5 millimeters in length, and the channel 
the electrons are accelerated through is only roughly 225 nanometers in width, 
making these accelerators as small as a computer chip.

Particles are accelerated by ultrashort laser pulses illuminating the 
nano-structures. "The dream application would be to place a particle 
accelerator on an endoscope in order to be able to administer radiotherapy 
directly at the affected area within the body," explains Dr. Tomáš Chlouba, one 
of the four lead authors of the recently published paper.

This dream may still be far beyond the grasp of the FAU team from the Chair of 
Laser Physics led by Prof. Dr. Peter Hommelhoff and consisting of Dr. Tomáš 
Chlouba, Dr. Roy Shiloh, Stefanie Kraus, Leon Brückner and Julian Litzel, but 
they have now succeeded in taking a decisive step in the right direction by 
demonstrating the nanophotonic electron accelerator.

"For the first time, we really can speak about a particle accelerator on a 
chip," enthuses Dr. Roy Shiloh.

Guiding electrons + acceleration = particle accelerator

Just over two years ago the team made their first major breakthrough: they 
succeeded in using the alternating phase focusing (APF) method from the early 
days of acceleration theory to control the flow of electrons in a vacuum 
channel over long distances.

This was the first major step on the way towards building a particle 
accelerator.

Now, all that was needed to gain major amounts of energy was acceleration.

"Using this technique, we have now succeeded not only in guiding electrons but 
also in accelerating them in these nano-fabricated structures over a length of 
half a millimeter," explains Stefanie Kraus.

Whilst this might not sound like much of an achievement to many, it is a huge 
success for the field of accelerator physics.

"We gained energy of 12 kiloelectron volts. That is a 43 percent gain in 
energy," explains Leon Brückner.

In order to accelerate the particles over such large distances (when seen from 
the nano scale), the FAU physicists combined the APF method with specially 
developed pillar-shaped geometrical structures.

This demonstration is just the beginning, however.

Now the aim is to increase the gain in energy and electron current to such an 
extent that the particle accelerator on a chip is sufficient for applications 
in medicine. For this to be the case, the gain in energy would have to be 
increased by a factor of approximately 100.

"In order to achieve higher electron currents at higher energies at the output 
of the structure, we will have to expand the structures or place several 
channels next to each other," Tomáš Chlouba explains the next steps of the FAU 
laser physicists.

Head-to-head race among physicists

What the Erlangen laser physicists succeeded in doing was demonstrated almost 
simultaneously by colleagues at Stanford University in the United States: Their 
results are currently under review, but can be viewed on a repository.

The two teams are working together on the realization of the "Accelerator on a 
chip" in a project funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

"In 2015, the FAU and Stanford led ACHIP team had a vision for a revolutionary 
approach to particle accelerator design," said Dr. Gary Greenburg of the Gordon 
and Betty Moore Foundation, "and we are delighted that our support has helped 
turn this vision into reality."

Original Stanford publication: P. Broaddus, T. Egenolf, D. S. Black, M. 
Murillo, C. Woodahl, Yu Miao, U. Niedermayer, R. L. Byer, K. J. Leedle, O. 
Solgaard, arXiv:2310.02434



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