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2024 Mykonos Facility Report

Schwarz, Jens; Awe, Thomas J.; Corbin, William; Dezetter, Karen J.; Hasson, Hannah R.; Hatch, Maren W.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Mason, Tyler J.; Hines, Nathan R.; Sarracino, Alex; Smith, Trevor J.; Yates, Kevin C.

This document summarizes the activities at the Mykonos Pulsed Power Facility during the calendar year 2024. The first section reports on the yearly shot statistics along with some facility highlights. Section 2 discusses the many improvements we were able to complete this year, thanks to the generous MAAP funding. The last part focuses on each individual campaign and their respective results.

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Development of a colinear Second-Harmonic Orthogonally Polarized (SHOP) interferometer for line-averaged electron density measurements in Magnetically Insulated Transmission Lines [Slides]

Hines, Nathan R.; Awe, Thomas J.; Schwarz, Jens; Patel, Sonal G.; Laity, George R.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Gilmore, Mark A.; Reyes, Pablo A.; Scoglietti, Daniel J.; Rose, David V.; Armstrong, Darrell J.; Bliss, David E.; Cuneo, Michael E.

A colinear Second-Harmonic Orthogonal Polarized (SHOP) interferometer diagnostic capable of making electron areal density measurements of plasmas formed in Magnetically Insulated Transmission Lines (MITLs) has been developed.

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Diverting current to drive an X-pinch for point projection radiography on the Z facility

Hasson, Hannah R.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Chandler, Katherine M.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Hutsel, Brian T.; Steiner, Adam M.; Dezetter, Karen J.; Hatch, Maren W.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; Reyes, Pablo A.; Webb, Timothy J.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Obregon, Robert J.; Lowinske, Michael C.; Hargrove, Justin R.; Ampleford, David; Schwarz, Jens

Abstract not provided.

Self-assembled Seashell Like Coatings for Large Area Robust Debris Shields for Next Generation Pulsed Power Drivers

Xu, Guangping; Fan, Hongyou; Mccoy, Chad A.; Schwarz, Jens; Mills, Melissa M.; Boro, Joseph; Ho, Tuan A.; Rosenthal, Justin; Davis, Haley; Xiong, Jenny; Yoon, Alyssa

During this LDRD project, our team developed a technology which enables the fabrication of novel nanostructures replicating seashell – “nature’s toughest material”. The resulting coatings exhibit high thermal stability up to 1650°C, which exceeds the hardness of Spectra® by ~44%, as well as the compressive strength of aluminum by ~57%. Coatings made with this technology are stronger, environmentally friendly, more sustainable, and more versatile than other comparable materials. Beryllium wafers, the current, most favorable shielding material in terms of thermal and mechanical properties, are very toxic and cost hundreds of times more than the new material developed in this project. The coatings on silicon wafer and stainless steel, respectively, have been tested as ride-along on the Z machine and clearly outperform the bare substrate. Use of this technology will have a profound global impact for pulsed power and fusion energy development, debris mitigation for spacecraft and satellites, durability of drill bits used in deep well drilling and tunnel boring operations, thermal protection of aircraft and manned spacecraft, and various other thermal and mechanical protection applications.

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Development of a colinear Second-Harmonic Orthogonal Polarization (SHOP) interferometer for electron areal density measurements in Magnetically Insulated Transmission Lines (MITLs)

Hines, Nathan R.; Awe, Thomas J.; Schwarz, Jens; Patel, Sonal G.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Rose, David V.; Reyes, Pablo A.; Scoglietti, Daniel J.; Gilmore, Mark A.; Laity, George R.; Armstrong, Darrell J.; Bliss, David E.; Cuneo, Michael E.

Experimental measurements of low density plasmas forming in Magnetically Insulated Transmission Line (MITL) regions are desired to improve our understanding of current loss and power flow. Therefore, a new optical interferometer diagnostic was commissioned via this LDRD project. To measure the expected 1013 - 1017 cm-3 electron densities inside the 0.5 - 6 mm Anode-Cathode (A-K) gaps, a colinear SHOP interferometer diagnostic was constructed. The diagnostic was initially fielded on the University of New Mexico (UNM) Helicon-Cathode (HelCat) plasma device which provided a highly repeatable and well understood plasma source for which the colinear SHOP interferometer’s functionality could be verified and measured. Utilizing the highly repeatable plasma source and shot averaging, the interferometer was able to achieve an areal density sensitivity of 1×1014 cm-2. This work at UNM lead to a Review of Scientific Instruments (RSI) publication [20], DOI:10.1063/5.0101687. After the diagnostic’s capability was proven at UNM, the colinear SHOP interferometer was commissioned for use on the Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) Mykonos accelerator. Here, it provided the first temporal areal density measurements of plasma formation in a parallel plate MITL. The diagnostic was able to achieve a single shot (no multi-shot averaging like at UNM) areal density sensitivity of 1×1015 cm-2 along a ~ 2mm probing path length, which provided adequate capability to conduct fundamental physics research of MITL plasma formation. CHICAGO and ALEGRA simulations support the diagnostics experimental findings. More experimental and computational work will continue, likely leading to another publication(s). The smaller scale Mykonos accelerator work has also provided justification that the colinear SHOP interferometer is a capable diagnostic for measuring plasma areal densities in the inner MITL and convolute regions of larger TW-class accelerators like SNL’s Z machine.

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Spectrographic and Interferometric Techniques to Measure Power Flow Plasmas on Z

IEEE International Conference on Plasma Science

Banasek, Jacob T.; Johnston, Mark D.; Reyes, Pablo A.; Schwarz, Jens; Hines, Nathan R.; Smith, Trevor J.

A challenge for TW-class accelerators, such as Sandia's Z machine, is efficient power coupling due to current loss in the final power feed. It is also important to understand how such losses will scale to larger next generation pulsed power (NGPP) facilities. While modeling is studying these power flow losses it is important to have diagnostic that can experimentally measure plasmas in these conditions and help inform simulations. The plasmas formed in the power flow region can be challenging to diagnose due to both limited lines of sight and being at significantly lower temperatures and densities than typical plasmas studied on Z. This necessitates special diagnostic development to accurately measure the power flow plasma on Z.

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Understanding Electrode Plasma Formation on Wires and Thin Foils via Vacuum Ultraviolet Spectroscopy of Desorbed Surface Contaminants

IEEE International Conference on Plasma Science

Smith, Trevor J.; Johnston, Mark D.; Jordan, N.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Schwarz, Jens; Mcbride, R.

Power-flow studies on the 30-MA, 100-ns Z facility at Sandia National Labs have shown that plasmas in the facility's magnetically insulated transmission lines can result in a loss of current to the load.1 During the current pulse, electrode heating causes neutral surface contaminants (water, hydrogen, hydrocarbons, etc.) to desorb, ionize, and form plasmas in the anode-cathode gap.2 Shrinking typical electrode thicknesses (∼1 cm) to thin foils (5-200 μm) produces observable amounts of plasma on smaller pulsed power drivers <1 MA).3 We suspect that as electrode material bulk thickness decreases relative to the skin depth (50-100 μm for a 100-500-ns pulse in aluminum), the thermal energy delivered to the neutral surface contaminants increases, and thus desorb faster from the current carrying surface.

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A model for K-shell x-ray yield from magnetic implosions at Sandia's Z machine

Physics of Plasmas

Schwarz, Jens; Vesey, Roger A.; Ampleford, David; Schaeuble, Marc-Andre; Giuliani, J.L.; Esaulov, A.; Dasgupta, A.; Jones, Brent M.

A zero-dimensional magnetic implosion model with a coupled equivalent circuit for the description of an imploding nested wire array or gas puff is presented. Circuit model results have been compared with data from imploding stainless steel wire arrays, and good agreement has been found. The total energy coupled to the load, E j × B, has been applied to a simple semi-analytic K-shell yield model, and excellent agreement with previously reported K-shell yields across all wire array and gas puff platforms is seen. Trade space studies in implosion radius and mass have found that most platforms operate near the predicted maximum yield. In some cases, the K-shell yield may be increased by increasing the mass or radius of the imploding array or gas puff.

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Bioinspired synthesis of thermally stable and mechanically strong nanocomposite coatings

MRS Advances

Xu, Guangping; Fan, Hongyou; Mccoy, Chad A.; Mills, Melissa M.; Schwarz, Jens

Abstract: An innovative biomimetic method has been developed to synthesize layered nanocomposite coatings using silica and sugar-derived carbon to mimic the formation of a natural seashell structure. The layered nanocomposites are fabricated through alternate coatings of condensed silica and sugar. Sugar-derived carbon is a cost-effective material as well as environmentally friendly. Pyrolysis of sugar will form polycyclic aromatic carbon sheets, i.e., carbon black. The resulting final nanocomposite coatings can survive temperatures of more than 1150 °C and potentially up to 1650 °C. These coatings have strong mechanical properties, with hardness of more than 11 GPa and elastic modulus of 120 GPa, which are 80% greater than those of pure silica. The layered coatings have many applications, such as shielding in the form of mechanical barriers, body armor, and space debris shields. Graphical abstract: [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Results 1–25 of 190
Results 1–25 of 190
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