INTRODUCTION
The great success with MICADAS (Mini Carbon Dating System, first prototype commissioned in 2004) in the AMS technology (Synal et al. Reference Synal, Stocker and Suter2007) triggered further development towards a tabletop AMS system. Changing the stripper gas from Ar to He has opened the possibility of lowering the accelerator voltage, as the yield of carbon isotopes stripping from the 1- state to the 1+ state is higher at lower energies (Schulze-König et al. Reference Schulze-König, Seiler, Suter, Wacker and Synal2011; Maxeiner et al. Reference Maxeiner, Seiler, Suter and Synal2015a). Based on the MICADAS system, the acceleration voltage at the gas stripper unit, where charge exchange of the negative ions takes place and interfering isobar molecules are dissociated, is then reduced from 200 kV for MICADAS to 50 kV for the LEA (Low Energy Accelerator) system. By using He stripper gas at a local areal density of $ \approx 0.5\;$ μg/cm2 molecular interferences can be destroyed at a particle energy of less than 100 keV (Schulze-König et al. Reference Schulze-König, Seiler, Suter, Wacker and Synal2011) without excessive beam losses that would impede reproducible measurements conditions. Detailed optimization of the acceleration stage hosting the stripper gas volume are necessary to balance molecule dissociation power and optical beam losses to enable measurement conditions suitable for routine high-performance radiocarbon dating measurements (Maxeiner et al. Reference Maxeiner, Suter, Christl and Synal2015b, Reference Maxeiner, Synal, Christl, Suter, Müller and Vockenhuber2019; Suter et al. Reference Suter, Keith Fifield and Maxeiner2022).
SYSTEM DESCRIPTION
Design of the LEA AMS System
Figure 1 shows the schematic layout of the new LEA system. Basic elements such as the ion source, injection magnet, and the fast beam bouncing system are copied from the MICADAS design, while the mass spectrometer following the acceleration stage has been modified according to the reduced ion energy. As a consequence, the beam curve radius of the high energy magnet is reduced from 350 mm (MICADAS) to 250 mm (LEA) and the curve radius for the electrostatic deflector is reduced from 380 mm (MICADAS) to 250 mm (LEA) (De Maria Reference De Maria2021). This leads to a reduction of the overall footprint of the system to just 2.0 × 3.0 m2, which is 1.5 m2 less than the footprint of MICADAS.
Accelerator Unit of LEA
Detailed view of the HE (High Energy) end of the LEA AMS system is shown in Figure 2. The geometry of the stripper tube defines the phase space volume that matches the geometric acceptance of the following HE spectrometer. The areal density of the stripper medium (He at $ \approx 0.5\;$ μg/cm2) enables the reduction of the molecular component of the injected mass 14 ion beam below the detection limit of the instrument. However, molecular break up products such as 12C and 13C ions will emerge partly from the stripper tube in charge state 2+. These ions will gain more energy during their passage through the HE acceleration gap than the 1+ ions.
If a charge exchange process 2+→1+ of those ions happens at the appropriate distance in the acceleration field (e.g., by collisional process with residual gas atoms/molecules), they will reach exactly the same momentum/charge (p/q) ratio as the 14C ion to be identified. Consequently, the filtering power of the HE magnet will be ineffective, and these parasitic ions will follow the 14C+ trajectories. Of course, they will have a different energy, but another collisional process further down the ion paths will create a certain probability that these ions will have a chance to reach the final detection system, mimic a false 14C ion, and create an elevated background. Such processes will happen in any AMS system exploiting a dual use of the acceleration voltage via the tandem principle. At the LEA system they might be enhanced due to the very low ion energy. To reduce this effect, the design of the LEA acceleration stage separates the exit of the conductance limiting aperture of the stripper housing from the acceleration gap. This reduces the density of the outflowing stripper gas in the critical region where the unwanted collisions can happen. Assuming a pressure distribution based on an error function at the exit of the conductance limiting aperture of the stripper housing, using the pressure inside the stripper housing and the base vacuum within the acceleration vessel as end members, the probability of parasitic charge exchange processes can be calculated. Based on this calculation, a reduction of background events by at least one order of magnitude can be expected. Combined with the achromatic combination of p/q (magnetic), and E/q (electrostatic) filtering elements enables 14C detection limits of better than 50,000 yr BP corresponding to 14C/12C ratio of less than 2 × 10–15 for processed blank materials.
14C Detector
A Bragg-type gas ionization detector run with isobutane 3.5 is used to detect the 14C ions. Since the energy of the 14C ions is significantly lower than in the MICADAS system (less than 150 keV), the detector (Müller et al. Reference Müller, Döbeli, Seiler and Synal2015) is operated in the proportional counting region instead of the ion chamber region. Several test measurements taken with the LEA system showed that values of 450 V for the applied voltage and a gas pressure of 9.5 mbar provide the most accurate results in separating the background from the real 14C events. Since the 14C isotope energy is only 140 keV, the detector signal is amplified by a factor of approximately 3, resulting in a signal level of 3 V. By comparison, the MICADAS uses 300 V detector voltage at an isobutane gas pressure of 20 mbar. With the same settings of the amplifier electronics and total 14C isotope energy of 420 keV and an amplification factor of 1, the signal level is also equal to 3 V.
The thickness of the entrance window separating the vacuum and the isobutane gas of the detector also plays an important role in ensuring a clean division between background noise and the 14C events, as seen in Figure 3. Two different Silicon Nitride membrane detector windows were tested with nominal thicknesses of d1 = 30 nm and d2 = 50 nm, respectively. Test measurements were conducted using graphitized phthalic acid (PhA) blank samples as target materials. They are presumably free of 14C due to their petrochemical origin but usually contain a 14C contamination record from the preparation process which is typically visible at a low 10–15 ratio with respect to 12C. Therefore, the obtained spectra show a distinct 14C peak and background events which predominantly dissipate lower energy signals in the active detector volume. There is no evidence that these background events are related to the detector itself, but are due to scattered particles. The background events and the 14C events in the energy spectrum of the 50 nm window, indicated as a red line in Figure 3, overlap and cannot be properly separated. Conversely, due to the lower stopping energy and energy straggling (Sun et al. Reference Sun, Döbeli, Müller, Stocker, Suter and Wacker2007; Suter et al. Reference Suter, Döbeli, Grajcar, Müller, Stocker, Sun, Synal and Wacker2007) in the thinner 30 nm membrane window, the energy spectrum recorded, marked with a blue line in Figure 3, shows two well-separated peaks that clearly distinguish the 14C events from other background events.
MEASUREMENTS AND PERFORMANCE TEST
Beam Optimization
In order to achieve reliable and stable results, each isotope beam has to be adjusted with the fast-bouncing system in such a way that beam scans performed with the low energy (LE) magnet as well as with the high energy (HE) magnet are depicted as shown in Figure 4. The detailed description of the adjustment technique can be found elsewhere (De Maria Reference De Maria2021). The LE and HE magnet scans are perfect tools to check the performance of the different isotope beams and to ensure stable long-term measurements. After the scans are taken, the magnetic fields are adjusted accordingly, as in our case BLE = 428 mT for the low energy magnet and BHE = 847.2 mT for the high energy magnet, indicated by blue lines in Figure 4. With these settings a transmission of 56% is achieved. The transmission is determined by the ratio of the $^{12}C_{HE}^ + $ beam current after the accelerator divided by the ${}_{}^{12}C_{LE}^ - $ beam current before the accelerator or ${}_{}^{12}C_{HE}^ + /{}_{}^{12}C_{LE}^ - $ . In comparison to the expected charge state yield of about 70% of the 1+ charge state at 92 keV (Maxeiner et al. Reference Maxeiner, Suter, Christl and Synal2015b) this corresponds to $ \approx $ 80% ion optical transmission of the LEA accelerator.
Performance Tests
For the performance test a series of two PhA blanks as well as five Oxalic Acid II (Oxa2; SRM-4990C) standards (Mann 1983) are introduced to the LEA system, where each sample is analyzed in 23 runs of 300 s testing time. All samples are measured sequentially for a total of 23 runs. The measurements of two well prepared blanks are shown in Figure 5(a), blank 1 with a measured radiocarbon age of 52,900 yr ± 250 yr and blank 2 with 54,700 yr ± 280 yr, which are exceptionally good results in terms of both the quality of the measurements and the sample preparation. The blanks measured on LEA tend to be even older than measured on the MICADAS (Sookdeo et al. Reference Sookdeo, Kromer, Büntgen, Friedrich, Friedrich, Helle, Pauly, Nievergelt, Reinig and Treydte2019), likely due to the implementation of an electrical field-free gap separating the conductance aperture at the exit of the stripper housing form the electric field section at the HE acceleration stage (see Figure 2).
The 14C/12C ratio of five Oxa2 standards are given in Figure 5(b). The measured 14C/12C ratios are normalized to a δ13C of –25‰ according to (Stuiver and Polach Reference Stuiver and Polach1977). While the raw data of 14C/12C change by about 1% over the course of the measurement, there is no discernible trend in the fractionation-corrected 14C/12C data. Notable here is the precision of the mean value of each sample, which is less than 1‰ for all samples. The mean of the means is (1.44191 ± 0.00063) * 10–12 (i.e., the statistical uncertainty of these measurements is less than 0.5‰). The standard deviation of 1.0‰ of the 5 measured standards is in good agreement with the uncertainty of the counting statistics of the individual measurements 0.9‰.
LEA vs. MICADAS
As a final performance test, the LEA system is compared with the MICADAS system (Wacker et al. Reference Wacker, Bollhalder, Sookdeo and Synal2019). To carry out the tests two sets of samples, each composing of 7 standards, 4 blanks and 26 wood samples, are measured on both systems. The wood samples are consecutive annual rings of a tree of known age (age determined by dendrochronology). The experiments are taken as follows: First, one set of samples is measured on the LEA system shown in Figure 6 (cal BP 2800–2825, Data LEA 1). Then, these samples are taken out of the LEA system, transferred into the MICADAS system and measured equally (Data MICADAS 1), and vice versa for the second set of samples (cal BP 2826–2851, Data LEA 2 & MICADAS 2). In other words, the second set of samples is measured on MICADAS before it is measured on LEA. The agreement of the results is striking, as shown in Figure 6, with a mean deviation of these two AMS measurements of only 1.0 ± 4.7 year. Please note that in these measurements, the first runs of each sample after insertion into the respective system are omitted as the sample materials have been exposed to air during the transfer of the magazines and therefore their surface may have become contaminated.
Table 1 compares the specifications of these two AMS systems. The approx. 20% higher transmission ratio of the LEA system is remarkable, representing an increase in efficiency, which in turn requires less sample material. However, the duration for the same experiment is presently still shorter for the MICADAS system, since MICADAS can be operated with roughly 50 % higher beam currents. To date, we have not seriously tested the LEA system with higher beam currents, but all previous experiments have shown that the best and most stable results are obtained with 12C-beam currents between 25 and 40 μA.
CONCLUSION
The LEA system is another step towards reaching the goal of a tabletop AMS system. With the reduction of the accelerator voltage to 50 kV, the overall dimensions of the system could be further reduced to 2 × 3 m2. A further reduction of the dimensions should be possible, such as through technical or constructional improvements or with a further reduction of the acceleration voltage.
The 14C background is excellent and exceeds results with most large AMS systems. Due to the compact design, the LEA system shows high measurement stability over time, though the optical transmission of the ion beam is reduced due to the relatively strong angular straggling of the low-energetic ion beam in the stripper. Consequently, highest precision measurements of 1–2‰ on modern samples are possible and compare well with measurements obtained with a larger, state-of-the-art MICADAS instrument.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We would like to thank K. Wyss, M. Alter, and K. Kündig for preparing the samples and J. Thut, R. Pfenninger, R. Gruber, P. Vogel, A. Wagner, T. Keller, and S. Bühlmann for technical support. We also thank the Swiss National Science Foundation for financially supporting this work (SNF grant number 200020_197137).