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Z-Backlighter facility upgrades: A path to short/long pulse, multi-frame, multi-color x-ray backlighting at the Z-Accelerator

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Schwarz, Jens S.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Schollmeier, Marius; Smith, Ian C.; Bellum, John; Kletecka, Damon; Sefkow, Adam; Smith, Douglas; Athertona, Briggs

We discuss upgrades and development currently underway at the Z-Backlighter facility. Among them are a new optical parametric chirped pulse amplifier (OPCPA) front end, 94 cm × 42 cm multi layer dielectric (MLD) gratings, dichroic laser beam transport studies, 25 keV x-ray source development, and a major target area expansion. These upgrades will pave the way for short/long pulse, multi-frame, multi-color x-ray backlighting at the Z-Accelerator. © 2011 SPIE.

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Achromatic circular polarization generation for ultra-intense lasers

Optics InfoBase Conference Papers

Rambo, Patrick K.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Bennett, Guy R.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Schollmeier, Marius; Atherton, B.W.

Generating circular polarization for ultra-intense lasers requires solutions beyond traditional transmissive waveplates which have insufficient bandwidth and pose nonlinear phase (B-integral) problems. We demonstrate a reflective design employing 3 metallic mirrors to gen-erate circular polarization. © 2010 Optical Society of America.

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Laser damage by ns and sub-ps pulses on hafnia/silica anti-reflection coatings on fused silica double-sided polished using zirconia or ceria and washed with or without an alumina wash step

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Bellum, John; Kletecka, Damon; Kimmel, Mark W.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Smith, Ian C.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Atherton, B.W.; Hobbs, Zachary; Smith, Douglas

Sandia's Large Optics Coating Operation has extensive results of laser induced damage threshold (LIDT) testing of its anti-reflection (AR) and high reflection coatings on substrates pitch polished using ceria and washed in a process that includes an alumina wash step. The purpose of the alumina wash step is to remove residual polishing compound to minimize its role in laser damage. These LIDT tests are for multi longitudinal mode, ns class pulses at 1064 nm and 532 nm (NIF-MEL protocol) and mode locked, sub-ps class pulses at 1054 nm (Sandia measurements), and show reasonably high and adequate laser damage resistance for coatings in the beam trains of Sandia's Z-Backlighter terawatt and petawatt lasers. An AR coating in addition to coatings of our previous reports confirms this with LIDTs of 33.0 J/cm2 for 3.5 ns pulses and 1.8 J/cm2 for 350 fs pulses. In this paper, we investigate both ceria and zirconia in doublesided polishing (common for large flat Z-Backlighter laser optics) as they affect LIDTs of an AR coating on fused silica substrates washed with or without the alumina wash step. For these AR coated, double-sided polished surfaces, ceria polishing in general affords better resistance to laser damage than zirconia polishing and laser damage is less likely with the alumina wash step than without it. This is supported by specific results of laser damage tests with 3.5 ns, multi longitudinal mode, single shot pulses at 1064 nm and 532 nm, with 7.0 ns, single and multi longitudinal mode, single and multi shot pulses at 532 nm, and with 350 fs, mode-locked, single shot pulses at 1054 nm. © 2010 Copyright SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering.

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Above-60-MeV proton acceleration with a 150 TW laser system

Schollmeier, Marius; Geissel, Matthias G.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Atherton, B.W.

Laser-accelerated proton beams can be used in a variety of applications, e.g. ultrafast radiography of dense objects or strong electromagnetic fields. Therefore high energies of tens of MeV are required. We report on proton-acceleration experiments with a 150 TW laser system using mm-sized thin foils and mass-reduced targets of various thicknesses. Thin- foil targets yielded maximum energies of 50 MeV. A further reduction of the target dimensions from mm-size to 250 x 250 x 25 microns increased the maximum proton energy to >65 MeV, which is comparable to proton energies measured only at higher-energy, Petawatt-class laser systems. The dependence of the maximum energy on target dimensions was investigated, and differences between mm-sized thin foils and mass-reduced targets will be reported.

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Ultrafast 25 keV backlighting for experiments on Z

Geissel, Matthias G.; Schollmeier, Marius; Kimmel, Mark W.; Pitts, Todd A.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Atherton, B.W.

To extend the backlighting capabilities for Sandia's Z-Accelerator, Z-Petawatt, a laser which can provide laser pulses of 500 fs length and up to 120 J (100TW target area) or up to 450 J (Z / Petawatt target area) has been built over the last years. The main mission of this facility focuses on the generation of high energy X-rays, such as tin Ka at 25 keV in ultra-short bursts. Achieving 25 keV radiographs with decent resolution and contrast required addressing multiple problems such as blocking of hot electrons, minimization of the source, development of suitable filters, and optimization of laser intensity. Due to the violent environment inside of Z, an additional very challenging task is finding massive debris and radiation protection measures without losing the functionality of the backlighting system. We will present the first experiments on 25 keV backlighting including an analysis of image quality and X-ray efficiency.

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Ultrafast 25 keV backlighting for experiments on Z

Geissel, Matthias G.; Atherton, B.W.; Pitts, Todd A.; Schollmeier, Marius; Headley, Daniel I.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Robertson, Grafton K.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Speas, Christopher S.

To extend the backlighting capabilities for Sandia's Z-Accelerator, Z-Petawatt, a laser which can provide laser pulses of 500 fs length and up to 120 J (100TW target area) or up to 450 J (Z/Petawatt target area) has been built over the last years. The main mission of this facility focuses on the generation of high energy X-rays, such as tin K{alpha} at 25 keV in ultra-short bursts. Achieving 25 keV radiographs with decent resolution and contrast required addressing multiple problems such as blocking of hot electrons, minimization of the source, development of suitable filters, and optimization of laser intensity. Due to the violent environment inside of Z, an additional very challenging task is finding massive debris and radiation protection measures without losing the functionality of the backlighting system. We will present the first experiments on 25 keV backlighting including an analysis of image quality and X-ray efficiency.

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Proton acceleration experiments with Z-Petawatt

Schollmeier, Marius; Geissel, Matthias G.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Atherton, B.W.

The outline of this presentation: (1) Proton acceleration with high-power lasers - Target Normal Sheath Acceleration concept; (2) Proton acceleration with mass-reduced targets - Breaking the 60 MeV threshold; (3) Proton beam divergence control - Novel focusing target geometry; and (4) New experimental capability development - Proton radiography on Z.

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Dual wavelength laser damage testing for high energy lasers

Kimmel, Mark W.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Atherton, B.W.

As high energy laser systems evolve towards higher energies, fundamental material properties such as the laser-induced damage threshold (LIDT) of the optics limit the overall system performance. The Z-Backlighter Laser Facility at Sandia National Laboratories uses a pair of such kiljoule-class Nd:Phosphate Glass lasers for x-ray radiography of high energy density physics events on the Z-Accelerator. These two systems, the Z-Beamlet system operating at 527nm/ 1ns and the Z-Petawatt system operating at 1054nm/ 0.5ps, can be combined for some experimental applications. In these scenarios, dichroic beam combining optics and subsequent dual wavelength high reflectors will see a high fluence from combined simultaneous laser exposure and may even see lingering effects when used for pump-probe configurations. Only recently have researchers begun to explore such concerns, looking at individual and simultaneous exposures of optics to 1064 and third harmonic 355nm light from Nd:YAG [1]. However, to our knowledge, measurements of simultaneous and delayed dual wavelength damage thresholds on such optics have not been performed for exposure to 1054nm and its second harmonic light, especially when the pulses are of disparate pulse duration. The Z-Backlighter Facility has an instrumented damage tester setup to examine the issues of laser-induced damage thresholds in a variety of such situations [2] . Using this damage tester, we have measured the LIDT of dual wavelength high reflectors at 1054nm/0.5ps and 532nm/7ns, separately and spatially combined, both co-temporal and delayed, with single and multiple exposures. We found that the LIDT of the sample at 1054nm/0.5ps can be significantly lowered, from 1.32J/cm{sup 2} damage fluence with 1054/0.5ps only to 1.05 J/cm{sup 2} with the simultaneous presence of 532nm/7ns laser light at a fluence of 8.1 J/cm{sup 2}. This reduction of LIDT of the sample at 1054nm/0.5ps continues as the fluence of 532nm/7ns laser light simultaneously present increases. The reduction of LIDT does not occur when the 2 pulses are temporally separated. This paper will also present dual wavelength LIDT results of commercial dichroic beam-combining optics simultaneously exposed with laser light at 1054nm/2.5ns and 532nm/7ns.

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Achromatic circular polarization generation for ultra-intense lasers

Rambo, Patrick K.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Bennett, Guy R.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Schollmeier, Marius; Atherton, B.W.

Generating circular polarization for ultra-intense lasers requires solutions beyond traditional transmissive waveplates which have insufficient bandwidth and pose nonlinear phase (B-integral) problems. We demonstrate a reflective design employing 3 metallic mirrors to generate circular polarization.

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Meeting thin film design and production challenges for laser damage resistant optical coatings at the Sandia Large Optics Coating Operation

Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Bellum, John; Kletecka, Damon; Rambo, Patrick K.; Smith, Ian C.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Geissel, Matthias; Copeland, Guild; Atherton, B.W.; Smith, Douglas; Smith, Ian C.; Khripin, Constantine

Sandia's Large Optics Coating Operation provides laser damage resistant optical coatings on meter-class optics required for the ZBacklighter Terawatt and Petawatt lasers. Deposition is by electron beam evaporation in a 2.3 m x 2.3 m x 1.8 m temperature controlled vacuum chamber. Ion assisted deposition (IAD) is optional. Coating types range from antireflection (AR) to high reflection (HR) at S and P polarizations for angle of incidence (AOI) from 0° to 47°. This paper reports progress in meeting challenges in design and deposition of these high laser induced damage threshold (LIDT) coatings. Numerous LIDT tests (NIF-MEL protocol, 3.5 ns laser pulses at 1064 nm and 532 nm) on the coatings confirm that they are robust against laser damage. Typical LIDTs are: at 1064 nm, 45° AOI, Ppol, 79 J/cm2 (IAD 32 layer HR coating) and 73 J/cm2 (non-IAD 32 layer HR coating); at 1064 nm, 32° AOI, 82 J/cm2 (Ppol) and 55 J/cm2 (Spol ) (non-IAD 32 layer HR coating); and at 532 nm, Ppol, 16 J/cm2 (25° AOI) and 19 J/cm2 (45° AOI) (IAD 50 layer HR coating). The demands of meeting challenging spectral, AOI and LIDT performances are highlighted by an HR coating required to provide R > 99.6% reflectivity in Ppol and Spol over AOIs from 24° to 47° within ∼ 1% bandwidth at both 527 nm and 1054 nm. Another issue is coating surface roughness. For IAD of HR coatings, elevating the chamber temperature to ∼ 120°C and turning the ion beam off during the pause in deposition between layers reduce the coating surface roughness compared to runs at lower temperatures with the ion beam on continuously. Atomic force microscopy and optical profilometry confirm the reduced surface roughness for these IAD coatings, and tests show that their LIDTs remain high. © 2009 Copyright SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering.

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Feasibility study of measuring the temperature and pressure of warm dense matter

Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens S.

We have investigated the feasibility of making accurate measurements of the temperature and pressure of solid-density samples rapidly heated by the Z-Petawatt laser to warm dense matter (WDM) conditions, with temperatures approaching 100eV. The study focused specifically on the heating caused by laser generated proton beams. Based on an extensive literature search and numerical investigations, a WDM experiment is proposed which will accurately measure temperature and pressure based on optical emission from the surface and sample expansion velocity.

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Z-Beamlet: a multi-KJ TW-class laser for backlit x-radiography applications on the Z-Accelerator

Atherton, B.W.; Gonzales, Rita A.; Gurrieri, Thomas G.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Neely, Kelly A.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.; Ruggles, Larry R.; Smith, Ian C.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Simpson, Walter W.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Speas, Christopher S.; Tafoya-Porras, Belinda T.; Wenger, D.F.; Young, Ralph W.; Adams, Richard G.; Bennett, Guy R.; Campbell, David V.; Carroll, Malcolm; Claus, Liam D.; Edens, Aaron E.; Geissel, Matthias G.

Abstract not provided.

X-ray optics on the Z-Accelerator backlit with the Z-Beamlet Laser & Z-Petawatt Laser systems

Gonzales, Rita A.; Gurrieri, Thomas G.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Neely, Kelly A.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.; Ruggles, Larry R.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Adams, Richard G.; Simpson, Walter W.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Smith, Ian C.; Speas, Christopher S.; Tafoya-Porras, Belinda T.; Wenger, D.F.; Young, Ralph W.; Edens, Aaron E.; Atherton, B.W.; Bennett, Guy R.; Campbell, David V.; Carroll, Malcolm; Claus, Liam D.; Geissel, Matthias G.

Abstract not provided.

Development of an in situ peak intensity measurement method for ultraintense single shot laser-plasma experiments at the Sandia Z petawatt facility

Review of Scientific Instruments

Link, Anthony; Chowdhury, Enam A.; Morrison, John T.; Ovchinnikov, Vladimir M.; Offermann, Dustin; Van Woerkom, Linn; Freeman, Richard R.; Pasley, John; Shipton, Erik; Beg, Farhat; Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Edens, Aaron E.; Porter, John L.

Using the physical process of ultraintense field ionization of high charge states of inert gas ions, we have developed a method of peak intensity measurement at the focus of high energy short pulse lasers operating in single shot mode. The technique involves detecting ionization products created from a low pressure gas target at the laser focus via time of flight detector. The observation of high ion charge states collected by the detector yields peak intensity at the focus when compared with the results obtained from well established tunnel ionization models. An initial peak intensity measurement of 5× 1016 W cm-2 was obtained for a 1.053 μm center wavelength, 0.4 J pulse with 1 ps pulse duration focused with an f5.5 off-axis parabola. Experiments with multijoule level, 500 fs laser pulses are on the way. © 2006 American Institute of Physics.

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1- and 2-frame monochromatic x-ray imaging of NIF-like capsules on Z and future higher-energy higher-resolution 2- & 4-frame x-radiography plans for ZR

Bennett, Guy R.; Campbell, David V.; Claus, Liam D.; Foresi, James S.; Johnson, Drew J.; Jones, Michael J.; Keller, Keith L.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; McPherson, Leroy A.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Neely, Kelly A.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.; Ruggles, Larry R.; Simpson, Walter W.; Speas, Christopher S.; Wenger, D.F.; Smith, Ian C.; Cuneo, M.E.; Adams, Richard G.; Atherton, B.W.; Barnard, Wilson J.; Beutler, David E.; Burr, Robert A.

Abstract not provided.

Simple temporal pulse shaping using two Pockels cells

Optical Engineering

Schwarz, Jens; Rambo, Patrick K.; Smith, Ian C.; Porter, John

We use two Pockels cells in series to achieve simple temporal pulse shaping. This technique is used in our optical parametric chirp pulse amplification (OPCPA) system to optimize the temporal shape of the pump pulse. It also offers a low cost alternative to arbitrary waveform generators. © 2005 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.

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Variable focal length on-and off-axis deformable concave and convex mirror and its application for thermal lens compensation

Schwarz, Jens S.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Smith, Ian C.

We have improved deformable mirror approach to allow good parabolic deformation for efficient thermal lens compensation. Our design uses an annulus to push onto the back surface of a flat mirror substrate, simply supported at the outer edge, thereby creating a parabolic deformation within the encircled area. We built an assembly using a 25.4 mm diameter, 1 mm thick mirror with a wedge of less than 10 arc seconds that was deformed with a 12 mm diameter annulus at the back of the mirror. Using a Shack-Hartman wavefront sensor we performed careful measurements to characterize the performance of the mirrors.

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Progress in symmetric ICF capsule implosions and wire-array z-pinch source physics for double z-pinch driven hohlraums

Proposed for publication in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion.

Cuneo, M.E.; Nash, Thomas J.; Yu, Edmund Y.; Mehlhorn, Thomas A.; Matzen, M.K.; Vesey, Roger A.; Bennett, Guy R.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Stygar, William A.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Smith, Ian C.; Bliss, David E.

Over the last several years, rapid progress has been made evaluating the double-z-pinch indirect-drive, inertial confinement fusion (ICF) high-yield target concept (Hammer et al 1999 Phys. Plasmas 6 2129). We have demonstrated efficient coupling of radiation from two wire-array-driven primary hohlraums to a secondary hohlraum that is large enough to drive a high yield ICF capsule. The secondary hohlraum is irradiated from two sides by z-pinches to produce low odd-mode radiation asymmetry. This double-pinch source is driven from a single electrical power feed (Cuneo et al 2002 Phys. Rev. Lett. 88 215004) on the 20 MA Z accelerator. The double z-pinch has imploded ICF capsules with even-mode radiation symmetry of 3.1 {+-} 1.4% and to high capsule radial convergence ratios of 14-21 (Bennett et al 2002 Phys. Rev. Lett. 89 245002; Bennett et al 2003 Phys. Plasmas 10 3717; Vesey et al 2003 Phys. Plasmas 10 1854). Advances in wire-array physics at 20 MA are improving our understanding of z-pinch power scaling with increasing drive current. Techniques for shaping the z-pinch radiation pulse necessary for low adiabat capsule compression have also been demonstrated.

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Development of an efficient large-aperture high damage-threshold sol-gel diffraction grating

Rambo, Patrick K.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Smith, Ian C.; Ashley, Carol S.; Branson, Eric D.; Dunphy, Darren R.; Cook, Adam W.; Reed, Scott T.; Johnson, William Arthur.

In order to develop the next generation of high peak intensity lasers, new grating technology providing higher damage thresholds and large apertures is required. The current assumption is that this technical innovation will be multilayer dielectric gratings, wherein the uppermost layer of a thin film mirror is etched to create the desired binary phase grating. A variant of this is explored with the upper grating layer being a lower density gelatin-based volume phase grating in either sol-gel or dichromated gelatin. One key benefit is the elimination of the etching step.

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1-to 10-keV x-ray backlighting of annular wire arrays on the Sandia Z-machine using bent-crystal imaging techniques

Sinars, Daniel S.; Smith, Ian C.; Wenger, D.F.; Cuneo, M.E.; Bennett, Guy R.; Anderson, Jessica E.; Porter, John L.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.

Annular wire array implosions on the Sandia Z-machine can produce >200 TW and 1-2 MJ of soft x rays in the 0.1-10 keV range. The x-ray flux and debris in this environment present significant challenges for radiographic diagnostics. X-ray backlighting diagnostics at 1865 and 6181 eV using spherically-bent crystals have been fielded on the Z-machine, each with a {approx}0.6 eVspectral bandpass, 10 {micro}m spatial resolution, and a 4 mm by 20mm field of view. The Z-Beamlet laser, a 2-TW, 2-kJ Nd:glass laser({lambda} = 527 nm), is used to produce 0.1-1 J x-ray sources for radiography. The design, calibration, and performance of these diagnostics is presented.

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Results 101–182 of 182
Results 101–182 of 182