AUTHOR=Cirrone Giuseppe A. P. , Petringa Giada , Catalano Roberto , Schillaci Francesco , Allegra Luciano , Amato Antonino , Avolio Renato , Costa Michele , Cuttone Giacomo , Fajstavr Antonin , Gallo Giuseppe , Giuffrida Lorenzo , Guarrera Mariacristina , Korn Georg , Larosa Giuseppina , Leanza Renata , Lo Vecchio Enzo , Messina Gustavo , Milluzzo Giuliana , Olsovcova Veronika , Pulvirenti Salvatore , Pipek Jan , Romano Francesco , Rizzo Daniele , Russo Antonio D. , Salamone S. , Scuderi Valentina , Velyhan Andriy , Vinciguerra Salvatore , Zakova Martina , ZappalĂ Emilio , Margarone Daniele TITLE=ELIMED-ELIMAIA: The First Open User Irradiation Beamline for Laser-Plasma-Accelerated Ion Beams JOURNAL=Frontiers in Physics VOLUME=8 YEAR=2020 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/physics/articles/10.3389/fphy.2020.564907 DOI=10.3389/fphy.2020.564907 ISSN=2296-424X ABSTRACT=
The main effort of the laser-driven ion acceleration community is aimed at improving particle beam features (in terms of final maximum energy, particle charge, and beam divergence) and to demonstrate reliable approaches for use for multidisciplinary applications. An ion acceleration target area based on unique laser capabilities is available at ELI-Beamlines (Extreme Light Infrastructure) in the Czech Republic; it is called ELIMAIA (ELI Multidisciplinary Applications of laser-Ion Acceleration) and aims to provide stable and characterized beams of particles accelerated by high-power lasers to offer them to the user community for interdisciplinary studies. The ELIMAIA section dedicated to ion focusing, selection, characterization, and irradiation is named ELIMED (ELI MEDical and multidisciplinary applications). Thanks to ELIMED, very high-dose-rate (around Gy/min) controlled proton and ion beams, with energy levels ranging from 5 to 250 MeV, will be transported to an in-air section dedicated to absolute and relative dosimetry of the laser-generated ions. A transmission dual-gap air ionization chamber will allow an on-line, non-destructive characterization of the ion dose at the user sample irradiation point. The uncertainty in the final dose released onto the sample is expected to be well below 5%. An ELIMED radiobiology pilot experiment is scheduled for 2021, during which