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IBA (Ion Beam Applications SA) is a medical technology company based in Louvain-la-Neuve. The company was founded in 1986 by Yves Jongen within the Cyclotron Research Center of the University of Louvain (UCLouvain) and became a university spin-off. It employs about 1500 people in 40 locations. [1]
As the director of the Cyclotron Research Centre, Yves Jongen had the idea of reducing the size and cost of the particle accelerator, [13] which led him to develop, in the mid-1970s, a cyclotron specially adapted for clinical use leading to the creation of Ion Beam Applications (IBA) in 1986, [18] which settled in front of the Cyclotron's ...
Ion beam analysis (IBA) is an important family of modern analytical techniques involving the use of MeV ion beams to probe the composition and obtain elemental depth profiles in the near-surface layer of solids. IBA is not restricted to MeV energy ranges.
Lawrence's 60-inch (152 cm) cyclotron, c. 1939, showing the beam of accelerated ions (likely protons or deuterons) exiting the machine and ionizing the surrounding air causing a blue glow. A cyclotron is a type of particle accelerator invented by Ernest Lawrence in 1929–1930 at the University of California, Berkeley, [1] [2] and patented in 1932.
The cyclotron type proton accelerator "CYCLONE-30" has a variable beam energy between 15 and 30 MeV and variable beam current up to 1.2 mA. It was designed, manufactured and installed by Belgian Ion Beam Applications S.A. (IBA). [6] The cyclotron cost 11.6 million EUR. [2]
IBA – Ion beam analysis; IBIC – Ion beam induced charge microscopy; ICP-AES – Inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy; ICP-MS – Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry; Immunofluorescence; ICR – Ion cyclotron resonance; IETS – Inelastic electron tunneling spectroscopy; IGA – Intelligent gravimetric analysis
9-inch cyclotron: University of California, Berkeley: 1931 Circular H + 2: 1.0 MeV: Proof of concept 11-inch cyclotron: University of California, Berkeley 1932 Circular Proton: 1.2 MeV 27-inch cyclotron University of California, Berkeley 1932–1936 Circular Deuteron: 4.8 MeV Investigated deuteron-nucleus interactions 37-inch cyclotron
The Indiana University Cyclotron Facility (IUCF). [ 5 ] was a cyclotron located on the Indiana University campus in Bloomington , Indiana , United States . It accelerated protons to an energy of 200 MeV , as well as light ions: deuterium , 3 He 4 He , 6 Li and 7 Li . [ 6 ]