<xml>
  <records>
    <record>
       <contributors>
          <authors>
             <author>Zhang, T.J.</author>
             <author>Yang, J.J.</author>
          </authors>
       </contributors>
       <titles>
          <title>
             100 MeV H⁻ Cyclotron Development and 800 MeV Proton Cyclotron Proposal
          </title>
       </titles>
		 <publisher>JACoW</publisher>
       <pub-location>Geneva, Switzerland</pub-location>
		 <isbn>978-3-95450-167-0</isbn>
		 <electronic-resource-num>10.18429/JACoW-Cyclotrons2016-TUC01</electronic-resource-num>
		 <language>English</language>
		 <pages>149-154</pages>
       <pages>TUC01</pages>
       <keywords>
          <keyword>cyclotron</keyword>
          <keyword>proton</keyword>
          <keyword>ion</keyword>
          <keyword>target</keyword>
          <keyword>ion-source</keyword>
       </keywords>
       <work-type>Contribution to a conference proceedings</work-type>
       <dates>
          <year>2017</year>
          <pub-dates>
             <date>2017-01</date>
          </pub-dates>
       </dates>
       <urls>
          <related-urls>
              <url>http://dx.doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-Cyclotrons2016-TUC01</url>
              <url>http://jacow.org/cyclotrons2016/papers/tuc01.pdf</url>
          </related-urls>
       </urls>
       <abstract>
          Since the last cyclotron conference in Vancouver, significant milestones have been achieved on the BRIF (Beijing Radioactive-Ion Beam Facility) project. On July 4, 2014 the first 100MeV proton beam was extracted from the H⁻ compact cyclotron. The cyclotron passed beam stability test with beam current of 25 μA for about 9 hours operation. In the year of 2015, the first radioactive ion beam of K-38 was produced by the ISOL system, and the beam current on the internal target of the 100 MeV cyclotron was increased to 720 μA. In the year of 2016, the cyclotron was scheduled to provide 1000 hours beam time for proton irradiation experiment, single-particle effects study and proof-of-principle trial on the proton radiography technology. It is also planed to build a specific beam line for proton therapy demonstration on the 100 MeV machine. In this talk, I will also introduce our new proposal of an 800 MeV, room temperature separate-sector proton cyclotron, which is proposed to provide 3~4 MW proton beam for versatile applications, such as neutron and neutrino physics, proton radiography and nuclear waste treatment.
       </abstract>
    </record>
  </records>
</xml>
