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2–7 Jun 2019
Simon Fraser University
America/Vancouver timezone
Welcome to the 2019 CAP Congress Program website! / Bienvenue au siteweb du programme du Congrès de l'ACP 2019 !

Rare Isotope Production at ISAC/TRIUMF

4 Jun 2019, 15:45
30m
SCC 9000 (Simon Fraser University)

SCC 9000

Simon Fraser University

Invited Speaker / Conférencier(ère) invité(e) Symposia Day - Nuclear Astrophysics and Medical Isotopes (in honour of Prof. John D'Auria) T4-3 Nuclear Astrophysics/Structure and Medical Isotopes in honour of Prof. John D'Auria PM-2 (DNP) | Astrophysique nucléaire / Structure et isotopes médicaux en hommage au prof. John D'Auria PM-2 (DPN)

Speaker

Peter Kunz (TRIUMF)

Description

The continuous 480 MeV proton beam from the TRIUMF H cyclotron offers a unique potential for the production of rare isotopes via spallation, fragmentation and fission reactions. It was first investigated with the TISOL (Test Isotope Separator On-Line) facility, a project of John d’Auria1. This ground-breaking work cleared the path for the present ISAC (Isotope Separation and ACceleration) and future ARIEL (Advanced Rare IsotopE Laboratory) facilities at TRIUMF2.
Currently, the ISAC facility provides a wide range of isotopes3 for basic research in the fields of nuclear astrophysics, nuclear structure and material science by irradiating targets containing a variety of refractory materials. Reaction products are extracted from the target via diffusion and effusion, ionized and transported through a network of electrostatic beamlines to the experiment. The isotope of interest determines the choice of target material and ion source.

A more recent application is the generation of pure exotic isotope samples from proton-irradiated targets for pre-clinical medical research towards therapeutic and diagnostic applications4.
While isotopes delivered to online experiments can have half-lives as short as a few milliseconds, radioactive samples collected for offline medical and radiochemistry studies at the ISAC Implantation Station typically have half-lives in the range of hours to days.

The focus has been so far on isotopes for targeted alpha therapy (TAT) from composite uranium carbide targets. Samples of 225Ac, 224Ra and 209/211At (generated from 213Fr and 211Fr beams) have been collected. In a new development, alternative isotopes for TAT and Auger Therapy are collected from high-power tantalum metal foil targets which provide high-intensity lanthanide beams3. In a first proof-of-principle test, a 165Tm/Er sample was collected and characterized.

  1. J.M. D'Auria, et. al.,The TISOL facility at TRIUMF: operational status at 10 years, NIM B 126, 7-11 (1997).
  2. Dilling, J. ISAC and ARIEL: The TRIUMF radioactive beam facilities and the scientific program. (Springer, 2014).
  3. Kunz P, ISAC Yield Database, 2018. URL: http://mis.triumf.ca/science/planning/yield/beam.
  4. Hoehr, C. et al. Medical Isotope Production at TRIUMF – from Imaging to Treatment. Physics Procedia 90, 200–208 (2017).
  5. Kunz P, et al. Composite uranium carbide targets at TRIUMF. J. Nuc. Mat. 2013;440(1–3):110–6.

Authors

Peter Kunz (TRIUMF) Friedhelm Ames (TRIUMF) Corina Andreoiu (Simon Fraser University) Jens Lassen (TRIUMF) Valery Radchenko (TRIUMF/UBC) Caterina Ramogida (Simon Fraser University) Paul Schaffer (TRIUMF) Andrew K.H. Robertson (TRIUMF/UBC) Fatima Garcia (Simon Fraser University)

Presentation materials