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Development and testing of immersed-Bz diodes with cryogenic anodes

Digest of Technical Papers-IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference

Rovang, Dean C.; Van De Valde, D.; Gregerson, D.; Puetz, E.; Bruner, N.; Cooper, G.; Cordova, S.; Droemer, D.; Hahn, K.; Johnston, Mark D.; Maenchen, John E.; McLean, J.; Molina, I.; Oliver, B.; O'Malley, J.; Portillo, Salvador; Welch, D.

Sandia National Laboratories is investigating and developing high-dose, high-brightness flash radiographic sources. The immersed-Bz diode employs large-bore, high-field solenoid magnets to help guide and confine an intense electron beam from a needle-like cathode "immersed" in the axial field of the magnet. The electron beam is focused onto a high-atomic-number target/anode to generate an intense source of bremsstrahlung X-rays. Historically, these diodes have been unable to achieve high dose (> 500 rad @ m) from a small spot (< 3 mm diameter). It is believed that this limitation is due in part to undesirable effects associated with the interaction of the electron beam with plasmas formed at either the anode or the cathode. Previous research concentrated on characterizing the behavior of diodes, which used untreated, room temperature (RT) anodes. Research is now focused on improving the diode performance by modifying the diode behavior by using cryogenic anodes that are coated in-situ with frozen gases. The objective of these cryogenically treated anodes is to control and limit the ion species of the anode plasma formed and hence the species of the counter-streaming ions that can interact with the electron beam. Recent progress in the development, testing and fielding of the cryogenically cooled immersed diodes at Sandia is described. ©2005 IEEE.

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Status of the 10 MV, 120 kA RITS-6 inductive voltage adder

Digest of Technical Papers-IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference

Johnson, D.; Bailey, V.; Altes, R.; Corcoran, P.; Smith, I.; Cordova, S.; Hahn, K.; Maenchen, John E.; Molina, I.; Portillo, Salvador; Puetz, E.; Sceiford, Matthew S.; Van De Valde, D.; Rose, D.; Oliver, B.; Welch, D.; Droemer, D.

The six-cell RITS-6 accelerator is an upgrade of the existing RITS-3 accelerator and is next in the sequence of Sandia IVA accelerators built to investigate/validate critical accelerator and radiographic diode issues for scaling to the Radiographic Integrated Test Stand (RITS) (nominally 16 MV, 156 kA, and 70 ns). In the RITS-6 upgrade to RITS-3 the number of cells/cavities, PFLs, laser triggered gas switches and intermediate stores is being doubled. A rebuilt single 61-nF Marx generator will charge the two intermediate storage capacitors. The RITS-3 experiments have demonstrated a MITL configuration matched to the PFL/induction cell impedance and a higher impedance MITL. RITS-6 is designed to utilize the higher impedance MITL providing a 10.5-MV, 123-kA output. The three years of pulsed power performance data from RITS-3 will be summarized and the design improvements being incorporated into RITS-6 will be outlined. The predicted output voltage and current for RITS-6 as a function of diode impedance will be shown. Particle-in-cell simulations of the vacuum power flow from the cell to the load for a range of diode impedances from matched to ∼40 Ohms will be shown and compared with the re-trapped parapotential flow predictions. The status of the component fabrication and system integration will be given. Another potential upgrade under consideration is RITS-62. In this case the RITS-6 Marx, intermediate stores, gas switches, and PFLs would be duplicated and a tee would replace the elbow that now connects a single PFL to a cell thereby allowing two PFLs to be connected to one cell. The output of RITS-62 matched to the cell/PFL impedance would then be 8 MV, 312 kA or 25.6 ohms. The predicted operating curves for RITS-62 with other non-matched MITLs will be shown. The power delivered to a radiographic diode can be maximized by the correct choice of MITL impedance given the cell/PFL and radiographic diode impedances. If the radiated output for a given diode has a stronger than linear voltage dependence this dependence can also be included in the correct choice of MITL impedance. The optimizations and trade-offs will be shown for RITS-6 and RITS-62 for diode impedances characteristic of radiographic diodes. © 2005 IEEE.

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Circuit Simulations of a 1 MV LTD for radiography

Leckbee, Joshua L.; Maenchen, John E.; Portillo, Salvador; Molina, I.

A 1 MV linear transformer driver (LTD), capable of driving a radiographic diode load, has been built and tested. A circuit model of this accelerator has been developed using the BERTHA circuit simulation code. Simulations are compared to data from power-flow experiments utilizing a large area electron-beam diode load. Results show that the simulation model performs well in modeling the baseline operation of the accelerator. In addition, the circuit model has been used to predict several possible fault modes. Simulations of switch prefires, main capacitor failure, vacuum insulator flashover, and core saturation have been used to estimate the probability of inducing further failures and the impact on the load voltage and current.

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Reliability assessment of a 1 MV LTD

Leckbee, Joshua L.; Maenchen, John E.; Portillo, Salvador; Molina, I.

A 1 MV linear transformer driver (LTD) is being tested with a large area e-beam diode load at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL). The experiments will be utilized to determine the repeatability of the output pulse and the reliability of the components. The 1 MV accelerator is being used to determine the feasibility of designing a 6 MV LTD for radiography experiments. The peak voltage, risetime, and pulse width as well as the cavity timing jitter are analyzed to determine the repeatability of the output pulse.

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Plasma-filled focusing cell for radiographic paraxial diodes on RITS

Conference Record of the International Power Modulator Symposium and High Voltage Workshop

Hahn, K.; Maenchen, John E.; Cordova, S.; Molina, I.; Portillo, Salvador; Rovang, Dean C.; Schamiloglu, E.; Welch, D.R.; Oliver, B.V.; Rose, D.V.

Paraxial diodes have been a stronghold for high-brightness, flash x-ray radiography. In its traditional configuration, an electron beam impinges onto an anode foil, entering a gas-filled transport cell. Within the cell, the beam is focused into a small spot onto a high-Z target to generate x-rays for the radiographic utility. Simulations using Lsp, a particle-in-cell code, have shown that within the gas-filled focusing cell the electron beam spot location sweeps axially during the course of the beam pulse. The result is a larger radiographic spot than is desirable. Lsp has also shown that replacing the gas-filled cell with a fully ionized plasma on the order of 1016 cm-3 will prevent the spot from significant beam sweeping, thus resulting in a smaller, more stable radiographic spot size. Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) is developing a plasma-filled focusing cell for future paraxial diode experiments. A z-discharge in a hydrogen fill is used to generate a uniform, highly ionized plasma. Laser interferometry is the key diagnostic to determine electron density in a light lab setting and during future paraxial diode shots on SNL's RITS-3 accelerator. A time-resolved spot diagnostic will also be implemented during diode shots to measure the change in spot size during the course of the pulse. © 2004 IEEE.

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Advances in pulsed-power-driven radiography system design

Maenchen, John E.; Cordova, S.; Bohlken, Fawn A.; Hahn, Kelly D.; Jaramillo, Deanna M.; Molina, I.; Portillo, Salvador; Madrid, Elizabeth A.; Rovang, Dean C.; Sceiford, Matthew S.

Flash x-ray radiography has undergone a transformation in recent years with the resurgence of interest in compact, high intensity pulsed-power-driven electron beam sources. The radiographic requirements and the choice of a consistent x-ray source determine the accelerator parameters, which can be met by demonstrated Induction Voltage Adder technologies. This paper reviews the state of the art and the recent advances which have improved performance by over an order of magnitude in beam brightness and radiographic utility.

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RITS-3 self-break water switch maintenance

Portillo, Salvador; Hahn, Kelly D.; Molina, I.; Cordova, S.; Maenchen, John E.

The radiographic integrated test stand (RITS-3) is a 5-MV, 160-kA, 70-ns inductive voltage adder accelerator at Sandia National Laboratories used to develop critical understanding of x-ray sources and flash radiographic drivers. On RITS-3 three pulse forming lines (PFLs) are used to drive three inductive voltage adder cavities. Each PFL contains a fast-pulse-charged, self-breakdown annular water switch that is used for initial pulse shaping and timing. Low loss in the switches combined with good synchronization is required for efficient operation of the accelerator. Switch maintenance is closely monitored over time to determine the effects of wear on switch breakdown performance.

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Results 1–25 of 33
Results 1–25 of 33