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The high current, fast, 100ns, Linear Transformer Driver (LTD) developmental project at Sandia Laboratories and HCEI

Mazarakis, Michael G.; Fowler, William E.; Matzen, M.K.; McDaniel, Dillon H.; Mckee, G.R.; Savage, Mark E.; Struve, Kenneth; Stygar, William A.; Woodworth, Joseph R.

Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, N.M., USA, in collaboration with the High Current Electronic Institute (HCEI), Tomsk, Russia, is developing a new paradigm in pulsed power technology: the Linear Transformer Driver (LTD) technology. This technological approach can provide very compact devices that can deliver very fast high current and high voltage pulses straight out of the cavity with out any complicated pulse forming and pulse compression network. Through multistage inductively insulated voltage adders, the output pulse, increased in voltage amplitude, can be applied directly to the load. The load may be a vacuum electron diode, a z-pinch wire array, a gas puff, a liner, an isentropic compression load (ICE) to study material behavior under very high magnetic fields, or a fusion energy (IFE) target. This is because the output pulse rise time and width can be easily tailored to the specific application needs. In this paper we briefly summarize the developmental work done in Sandia and HCEI during the last few years, and describe our new MYKONOS Sandia High Current LTD Laboratory. An extensive evaluation of the LTD technology is being performed at SNL and the High Current Electronic Institute (HCEI) in Tomsk Russia. Two types of High Current LTD cavities (LTD I-II, and 1-MA LTD) were constructed and tested individually and in a voltage adder configuration (1-MA cavity only). All cavities performed remarkably well and the experimental results are in full agreement with analytical and numerical calculation predictions. A two-cavity voltage adder is been assembled and currently undergoes evaluation. This is the first step towards the completion of the 10-cavity, 1-TW module. This MYKONOS voltage adder will be the first ever IVA built with a transmission line insulated with deionized water. The LTD II cavity renamed LTD III will serve as a test bed for evaluating a number of different types of switches, resistors, alternative capacitor configurations, cores and other cavity components. Experimental results will be presented at the Conference and in future publications.

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Shaping the output pulse of a linear-transformer-driver module

Proposed for publication in Physical Review Special Topics: Accelerators and Beams.

Stygar, William A.; Stoltzfus, Brian; Woodworth, Joseph R.; Fowler, William E.; LeChien, Keith R.; Long, Finis W.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; Mckee, G.R.; Mckenney, John; Savage, Mark E.

We demonstrate that a wide variety of current-pulse shapes can be generated using a linear-transformer-driver (LTD) module that drives an internal water-insulated transmission line. The shapes are produced by varying the timing and initial charge voltage of each of the module's cavities. The LTD-driven accelerator architecture outlined in [Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 10, 030401 (2007)] provides additional pulse-shaping flexibility by allowing the modules that drive the accelerator to be triggered at different times. The module output pulses would be combined and symmetrized by water-insulated radial-transmission-line impedance transformers [Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 11, 030401 (2008)].

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Architecture of petawatt-class z-pinch accelerators

Physical Review Special Topics - Accelerators and Beams

Stygar, William A.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Headley, D.I.; Ives, H.C.; Leeper, Ramon J.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; Olson, C.L.; Porter, J.L.; Wagoner, T.C.; Woodworth, J.R.

We have developed an accelerator architecture that can serve as the basis of the design of petawatt-class z-pinch drivers. The architecture has been applied to the design of two z-pinch accelerators, each of which can be contained within a 104-m-diameter cylindrical tank. One accelerator is driven by slow (∼1μs) Marx generators, which are a mature technology but which necessitate significant pulse compression to achieve the short pulses (1μs) required to drive z pinches. The other is powered by linear transformer drivers (LTDs), which are less mature but produce much shorter pulses than conventional Marxes. Consequently, an LTD-driven accelerator promises to be (at a given pinch current and implosion time) more efficient and reliable. The Marx-driven accelerator produces a peak electrical power of 500 TW and includes the following components: (i) 300 Marx generators that comprise a total of 1.8×104 capacitors, store 98 MJ, and erect to 5 MV; (ii) 600 water-dielectric triplate intermediate-store transmission lines, which also serve as pulse-forming lines; (iii) 600 5-MV laser-triggered gas switches; (iv) three monolithic radial-transmission-line impedance transformers, with triplate geometries and exponential impedance profiles; (v) a 6-level 5.5-m-diameter 15-MV vacuum insulator stack; (vi) six magnetically insulated vacuum transmission lines (MITLs); and (vii) a triple-post-hole vacuum convolute that adds the output currents of the six MITLs, and delivers the combined current to a z-pinch load. The accelerator delivers an effective peak current of 52 MA to a 10-mm-length z pinch that implodes in 95 ns, and 57 MA to a pinch that implodes in 120 ns. The LTD-driven accelerator includes monolithic radial transformers and a MITL system similar to those described above, but does not include intermediate-store transmission lines, multimegavolt gas switches, or a laser trigger system. Instead, this accelerator is driven by 210 LTD modules that include a total of 1×106 capacitors and 5×105 200-kV electrically triggered gas switches. The LTD accelerator stores 182 MJ and produces a peak electrical power of 1000 TW. The accelerator delivers an effective peak current of 68 MA to a pinch that implodes in 95 ns, and 75 MA to a pinch that implodes in 120 ns. Conceptually straightforward upgrades to these designs would deliver even higher pinch currents and faster implosions. © 2007 The American Physical Society.

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Driver transition geometries and inductance considerations leading to design guidelines for a Z-IFE power plant

Fusion Science and Technology

Smith, David L.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; Olson, Craig L.

A 70-MA, 7-MV, ∼100-ns driver for a Z-pinch Inertial Fusion Energy (Z-IFE) power plant has been proposed. In this summary we address the transition region between the 70 Linear Transformer Driver (LTD) modules and the center Recyclable Transmission Line (RTL) load section, which convolves from the coaxial vacuum Magnetically Insulated Transmission Lines (MITL) to a parallel tri-plate and then a bi-plate disk feed. An inductive annular chamber terminates one side of the tri-plate in a manner that preserves vacuum and electrical circuit integrity without significant energy losses. The simplicity is offset by the disadvantage of the chamber size, which is proportional to the driver impedance and decreases with the addition of more parallel modules. Inductive isolation chamber sizes are estimated in this paper, based on an optimized LTD equivalent circuit simulation source driving a matched load using transmission line models. We consider the trade-offs between acceptable energy loss and the size of the inductive isolation chamber; accepting a 6% energy loss would only require a 60-nH chamber.

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Conceptual design for a linear-transformer driver (LTD)-based refurbishment and upgrade of the Saturn accelerator pulse-power system

Mazarakis, Michael G.; Struve, Kenneth

The purpose of this work was to develop a conceptual design for the Saturn accelerator using the modular Liner-Transformer Driver (LTD) technology to identify risks and to focus development and research for this new technology. We present a reference design for a Saturn class driver based on a number of linear inductive voltage adders connected in parallel. This design is very similar to a design reported five years ago [1]. However, with the design reported here we use 1-MA, 100-kV LTD cavities as building blocks. These cavities have already been built and are currently in operation at the HCEI in Tomsk, Russia [2]. Therefore, this new design integrates already-proven individual components into a full system design.

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Resistive hose growth of intense ion beams propagating in air

Physical Review Special Topics - Accelerators and Beams

Rose, D.V.; Genoni, T.C.; Welch, D.R.; Mazarakis, Michael G.

The growth of the resistive hose instability for intense proton beams is examined using three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. The simulation results are compared with a time-dependent model of resistive hose growth that uses a spread-mass formulation and a time-dependent conductivity model. Radius tailoring of the beam head is shown to suppress high-frequency instability growth. In addition, the effects of a reduced-density plasma channel on the growth of the resistive hose instability is calculated. © 2006 The American Physical Society.

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Measurement of the energy and power radiated by a pulsed blackbody x-ray source

Proposed for publication in Physical Review E.

Stygar, William A.; Leeper, Ramon J.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; McDaniel, Dillon H.; Mckenney, John; Mills, Jerry A.; Ruggles, Larry; Seamen, Johann F.; Simpson, Walter W.; Dropinski, Steven D.; Warne, Larry K.; York, Matthew W.; McGurn, John S.; Bryce, Edwin A.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Johnson, William A.; Jorgenson, Roy E.

We have developed a diagnostic system that measures the spectrally integrated (i.e. the total) energy and power radiated by a pulsed blackbody x-ray source. The total-energy-and-power (TEP) diagnostic system is optimized for blackbody temperatures between 50 and 350 eV. The system can view apertured sources that radiate energies and powers as high as 2 MJ and 200 TW, respectively, and has been successfully tested at 0.84 MJ and 73 TW on the Z pulsed-power accelerator. The TEP system consists of two pinhole arrays, two silicon-diode detectors, and two thin-film nickel bolometers. Each of the two pinhole arrays is paired with a single silicon diode. Each array consists of a 38 x 38 square array of 10-{micro}m-diameter pinholes in a 50-{micro}m-thick tantalum plate. The arrays achromatically attenuate the x-ray flux by a factor of {approx}1800. The use of such arrays for the attenuation of soft x rays was first proposed by Turner and co-workers [Rev. Sci. Instrum. 70, 656 (1999)RSINAK0034-674810.1063/1.1149385]. The attenuated flux from each array illuminates its associated diode; the diode's output current is recorded by a data-acquisition system with 0.6-ns time resolution. The arrays and diodes are located 19 and 24 m from the source, respectively. Because the diodes are designed to have an approximately flat spectral sensitivity, the output current from each diode is proportional to the x-ray power. The nickel bolometers are fielded at a slightly different angle from the array-diode combinations, and view (without pinhole attenuation) the same x-ray source. The bolometers measure the total x-ray energy radiated by the source and--on every shot--provide an in situ calibration of the array-diode combinations. Two array-diode pairs and two bolometers are fielded to reduce random uncertainties. An analytic model (which accounts for pinhole-diffraction effects) of the sensitivity of an array-diode combination is presented.

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Tungsten wire number dependence of the implosion dynamics at the Z-accelerator

Plasma Devices and Operations

Mazarakis, Michael G.; Deeney, C.E.; Douglas, M.R.; Stygar, William A.; Sinars, Daniel; Cuneo, Michael E.; Chittenden, J.; Chandler, G.A.; Nash, T.J.; Struve, K.W.; McDaniel, D.H.

In this paper, we report the results of an experimental campaign to study the initiation, implosion dynamics and radiation yield of tungsten wire arrays as a function of the wire number. An optimization study of the X-ray emitted peak power, rise time and FWHM was effectuated by varying the wire number while keeping the total array mass constant at ∼5.8mg. The driver used was the ∼20MA Z-accelerator, in its usual short pulse mode of 100ns. We studied single arrays of diameter 20mm and height 10mm. The smaller wire number studied was 30 and the largest 600. It appears that 600 is the highest wire number achievable with present-day technology. Radial and axial diagnostics were used, including a crystal monochromatic X-ray backlighter. An optimum wire number of ∼370 was observed, which is very close to the number (300) routinely used for the ICF program in Sandia. © 2005 Taylor & Francis Group Ltd.

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Mass profile and instability growth measurements for 300-wire z-pinch implosions driven by 14-18, MA

Proposed for publication in Physical Review Letters.

Sinars, Daniel; Cuneo, Michael E.; Yu, Edmund; Bliss, David E.; Nash, Thomas J.; Deeney, Christopher D.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; Wenger, D.F.

We present the first comprehensive study of high wire-number, wire-array Z-pinch dynamics at 14-18 MA using x-ray backlighting and optical shadowgraphy diagnostics. The cylindrical arrays retain slowly expanding, dense wire cores at the initial position up to 60% of the total implosion time. Azimuthally correlated instabilities at the array edge appear during this stage which continue to grow in amplitude and wavelength after the start of bulk motion, resulting in measurable trailing mass that does not arrive on axis before peak x-ray emission.

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Z-pinch current-scaling experiments at 10[7] amps

Proposed for publication in Physical Review E.

Stygar, William A.; Matzen, M.K.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; McDaniel, Dillon H.; McGurn, John S.; Mckenney, John; Mix, L.P.; Muron, David J.; Porter, John L.; Ramirez, Juan J.; Ruggles, Larry; Seamen, Johann F.; Simpson, Walter W.; Speas, Christopher S.; Spielman, Rick; Struve, Kenneth; Torres, Jose; Vesey, Roger A.; Wagoner, Timothy C.; Gilliland, Terrance L.; Bennett, Guy R.; Ives III, Harry C.; Jobe, Daniel O.; Lazier, Steven E.; Mills, Jerry A.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Pyle, John H.; Romero, Tobias M.; Serrano, Jason D.; Smelser, Ruth; Fehl, David L.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Bailey, James E.; Bliss, David E.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Leeper, Ramon J.

Abstract not provided.

A new linear inductive voltage adder driver for the Saturn Accelerator

Mazarakis, Michael G.; Spielman, Rick; Struve, Kenneth; Long, Finis W.

Saturn is a dual-purpose accelerator. It can be operated as a large-area flash x-ray source for simulation testing or as a Z-pinch driver especially for K-line x-ray production. In the first mode, the accelerator is fitted with three concentric-ring 2-MV electron diodes, while in the Z-pinch mode the current of all the modules is combined via a post-hole convolute arrangement and driven through a cylindrical array of very fine wires. We present here a point design for a new Saturn class driver based on a number of linear inductive voltage adders connected in parallel. A technology recently implemented at the Institute of High Current Electronics in Tomsk (Russia) is being utilized. In the present design we eliminate Marx generators and pulse-forming networks. Each inductive voltage adder cavity is directly fed by a number of fast 100-kV small-size capacitors arranged in a circular array around each accelerating gap. The number of capacitors connected in parallel to each cavity defines the total maximum current. By selecting low inductance switches, voltage pulses as short as 30-50-ns FWHM can be directly achieved. The voltage of each stage is low (100-200 kv). Many stages are required to achieve multi-megavolt accelerator output. However, since the length of each stage is very short (4-10 cm), accelerating gradients of higher than 1 MV/m can easily be obtained. The proposed new driver will be capable of delivering pulses of 15-MA, 36-TW, 1.2-MJ to the diode load, with a peak voltage of {minus}2.2 MV and FWHM of 40-ns. And although its performance will exceed the presently utilized driver, its size and cost could be much smaller ({approximately}1/3). In addition, no liquid dielectrics like oil or deionized water will be required. Even elimination of ferromagnetic material (by using air-core cavities) is a possibility.

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A Compact, High-Voltage E-Beam Pulser

Mazarakis, Michael G.

It is well established that pulsed power technology is relatively cheaper than other architectures aiming to produce high-current, high-voltage electron or ion accelerators. The footprints of most pulsed power accelerators are large making them incompatible for applications that require either portability or a large number of similar components for very high power devices (like Z-pinch accelerators). Most of the modern pulsed power accelerators require several stages of pulse conditioning (pulse forming) to convert the multimicrosecond pulse of a Marx generator output to the 50-1 00-ns pulse required for an electron or ion diode or a cell cavity of an inductive voltage adder We propose a new and unique method for constmcting high-current, high-voltage pulsed accelerators. The salient future of the approach is switching and inductively adding the pulses at low voltage straight out of the capacitors through low inductance transfer and soft iron core isolation. High currents can be achieved by feeding each core with many capacitors connected in parallel in a circular array. High voltage is obtained by inductively adding many stages in series. Utilizing the presently available capacitors and switches we can build a 300-kA, 7-MV generator with an overall outer diameter (including capacitors and switches) of 1.2 m and length of 6.5 m! In addition our accelerator can be multipulsed with a repetition rate up to the capacitor specifications and no less than 10 Hz. As an example the design of a 3-MeV, 100-kA accelerator is presented and analyzed.

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Inductive voltage adder advanced hydrodynamic radiographic technology demonstration

Mazarakis, Michael G.

This paper presents the design, results, and analysis of a high-brightness electron beam technology demonstration experiment completed at Sandia National Laboratories, performed in collaboration with Los Alamos National Laboratory. The anticipated electron beam parameters were: 12 MeV, 35-40 kA, 0.5-mm rms radius, and 40-ns full width half maximum (FWHM) pulse duration. This beam, on an optimum thickness tantalum converter, should produce a very intense x-ray source of {approximately} 1.5-mm spot size and 1 kR dose @ 1 m. The accelerator utilized was SABRE, a pulsed inductive voltage adder, and the electron source was a magnetically immersed foilless electron diode. For these experiments, SABRE was modified to high-impedance negative-polarity operation. A new 100-ohm magnetically insulated transmission line cathode electrode was designed and constructed; the cavities were rotated 180{degrees} poloidally to invert the central electrode polarity to negative; and only one of the two pulse forming lines per cavity was energized. A twenty- to thirty-Tesla solenoidal magnet insulated the diode and contained the beam at its extremely small size. These experiments were designed to demonstrate high electron currents in submillimeter radius beams resulting in a high-brightness high-intensity flash x-ray source for high-resolution thick-object hydrodynamic radiography. The SABRE facility high-impedance performance was less than what was hoped. The modifications resulted in a lower amplitude (9 MV), narrower-than-anticipated triangular voltage pulse, which limited the dose to {approximately} 20% of the expected value. In addition, halo and ion-hose instabilities increased the electron beam spot size to > 1.5 mm. Subsequent, more detailed calculations explain these reduced output parameters. An accelerator designed (versus retrofit) for this purpose would provide the desired voltage and pulse shape.

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Pencil-like mm-size electron beams produced with linear inductive voltage adders (LIVA)

Mazarakis, Michael G.

This paper presents design, analysis, and first results of the high brightness electron beam experiments currently under investigation at Sandia. Anticipated beam parameters are: energy 12 MeV, current 35-40 kA, rms radius 0.5 mm, pulse duration 40 ns FWHM. The accelerator is SABRE, a pulsed LIVA modified to higher impedance, and the electron source is a magnetically immersed foilless electron diode. 20 to 30 Tesla solenoidal magnets are required to insulate the diode and contain the beam to its extremely small sized (1 mm) envelope. These experiments are designed to push the technology to produce the highest possible electron current in a submillimeter radius beam. Design, numercial simulations, and first experimental results are presented.

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High voltage high brightness electron accelerator with MITL voltage adder coupled to foilless diode

Mazarakis, Michael G.

The design and analysis of a high brightness electron beam experiment under construction at Sandia National Laboratory is presented. The beam energy is 12 MeV, the current 35-40 kA, the rms radius 0.5 mm, and the pulse duration FWHM 40 ns. The accelerator is SABRE a pulsed inductive voltage adder, and the electron source is a magnetically immersed foilless diode. This experiment has as its goal to stretch the technology to the edge and produce the highest possible electron current in a submillimeter radius beam.

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Self-Magnetically Insulated Transmission Line ( SMILE'') a new version for the RADLAC II linear accelerator

Mazarakis, Michael G.

We present here the SMILE modification of the RADLAC II accelerator which enabled us to produce high quality 12--14 MV, 100 kA beams. It consists of replacing the 40-kA 4-MV beam injector, magnetic vacuum transport and accelerating gaps by a long cathode shank which adds up the voltages of the 8 pulse forming lines. The beam now is produced at the end of the accelerator and is free of all the possible instabilities associated with accelerating gaps and magnetic vacuum transport. Annular beams with {beta}{perpendicular} {le} 0.1 and radius r{sub b} {le} 2 cm are routinely obtained and extracted from a small magnetically immersed foilless electron diode. Results of the experimental evaluation are presented and compared with design parameters and numerical simulation predictions. 6 refs., 7 figs., 1 tab.

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4-MV injector beam generation and IFT transport

Mazarakis, Michael G.

We report the first experiments evaluating the beam generation by the new 4-MV RLA injector. Beams of 15 to 27 kA current were produced and successfully transported up to the first post-accelerating cavity (ET-2), 1.3 m downstream. The beam radius was measured with an x-ray pin-hole camera and found to be equal to 5 mm. We selected an apertured ion-focused foilless diode among the various available diode options. It is the simplest and easiest to operate and can be adjusted to provide variable beam impedance loads. Experimental results will be presented and compared with numerical simulations.

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Results 51–83 of 83
Results 51–83 of 83