中文 |

Newsroom

China's High Intensity Heavy-ion Accelerator Facility Completes Beam Commissioning

Oct 31, 2025

Figure 1. Aerial View of HIAF. (Image from IMP)

The High Intensity heavy-ion Accelerator Facility (HIAF), one of China's major scientific and technological infrastructure projects, successfully completed commissioning with beam on October 28, marking a crucial milestone in its construction.

Located in Huizhou, Guangdong Province, HIAF is designed as a multi-function accelerator for heavy-ion physics and applications. It is constructed by the Institute of Modern Physics (IMP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

HIAF aims to produce high intensity heavy-ion beams across a broad range of energies. By accelerating ions to high energy, heavy-ion accelerators serve as "super microscopes", enabling scientists to explore the ultra-microscopic world and supporting cutting-edge applications in a wide spectrum of fields such as energy research, healthcare, materials science, aerospace, and biological breeding.

During the commissioning, heavy ions were generated by a superconducting electron cyclotron resonance ion source, pre-accelerated by a superconducting linear accelerator, and then accumulated and accelerated to high energy in the booster ring. The beams were subsequently transported to experimental terminals, achieving full beam commissioning for the first time.

Using an independently developed high-performance control system, the project team has achieved precise beam commissioning, laying a solid foundation for the reliable operation of HIAF.

HIAF started construction in December 2018 with a planned timeline of seven years. It is one of the world's largest ion accelerators capable of accelerating all ions, with a total beamline length of 2 kilometers, over 6,000 sets of large process equipment and nearly 5 million components.

Over the past decade, the project team has achieved a series of technological breakthroughs. These include the development of the world's first fourth-generation ECR ion source and China's first milliampere-level continuous-wave heavy-ion superconducting linear accelerator. Innovations were also achieved in critical subsystems such as accelerating cavities, magnets, power supplies, and vacuum chambers. They also pioneered a "digital twin-driven construction" model, significantly enhancing the quality and efficiency of this large-scale scientific installation.

Upon completion, HIAF will deliver the world's highest intense pulsed heavy-ion beams and provide a multifunctional nuclear mass spectrometer with the highest precision.

Figure 2. The booster ring of HIAF (Image from IMP)

Figure 3. The spectrometer ring for high-precision experiments (Image from IMP)

Contact

LIU Fang

Institute of Modern Physics

E-mail:

Related Articles
Contact Us
  • 86-10-68597521 (day)

    86-10-68597289 (night)

  • 52 Sanlihe Rd., Xicheng District,

    Beijing, China (100864)

Copyright © 2002 - Chinese Academy of Sciences