Publications

Results 51–75 of 91
Skip to search filters

Magnetically launched flyer plate technique for probing electrical conductivity of compressed copper

Journal of Applied Physics

Cochrane, Kyle C.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Riford, Z.; Carpenter, John H.

The electrical conductivity of materials under extremes of temperature and pressure is of crucial importance for a wide variety of phenomena, including planetary modeling, inertial confinement fusion, and pulsed power based dynamic materials experiments. There is a dearth of experimental techniques and data for highly compressed materials, even at known states such as along the principal isentrope and Hugoniot, where many pulsed power experiments occur. We present a method for developing, calibrating, and validating material conductivity models as used in magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations. The difficulty in calibrating a conductivity model is in knowing where the model should be modified. Our method isolates those regions that will have an impact. It also quantitatively prioritizes which regions will have the most beneficial impact. Finally, it tracks the quantitative improvements to the conductivity model during each incremental adjustment. In this paper, we use an experiment on Sandia National Laboratories Z-machine to isentropically launch multiple flyer plates and, with the MHD code ALEGRA and the optimization code DAKOTA, calibrated the conductivity such that we matched an experimental figure of merit to +/-1%.

More Details

Probing off-Hugoniot states in Ta, Cu, and Al to 1000 GPa compression with magnetically driven liner implosions

Journal of Applied Physics

Lemke, Raymond W.; Dolan, Daniel H.; Dalton, D.G.; Brown, Justin L.; Tomlinson, K.; Robertson, G.R.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Harding, Eric H.; Mattsson, A.E.; Carpenter, John H.; Drake, Richard R.; Cochrane, Kyle C.; Blue, B.E.; Robinson, Allen C.; Mattsson, Thomas M.

We report on a new technique for obtaining off-Hugoniot pressure vs. density data for solid metals compressed to extreme pressure by a magnetically driven liner implosion on the Z-machine (Z) at Sandia National Laboratories. In our experiments, the liner comprises inner and outer metal tubes. The inner tube is composed of a sample material (e.g., Ta and Cu) whose compressed state is to be inferred. The outer tube is composed of Al and serves as the current carrying cathode. Another aluminum liner at much larger radius serves as the anode. A shaped current pulse quasi-isentropically compresses the sample as it implodes. The iterative method used to infer pressure vs. density requires two velocity measurements. Photonic Doppler velocimetry probes measure the implosion velocity of the free (inner) surface of the sample material and the explosion velocity of the anode free (outer) surface. These two velocities are used in conjunction with magnetohydrodynamic simulation and mathematical optimization to obtain the current driving the liner implosion, and to infer pressure and density in the sample through maximum compression. This new equation of state calibration technique is illustrated using a simulated experiment with a Cu sample. Monte Carlo uncertainty quantification of synthetic data establishes convergence criteria for experiments. Results are presented from experiments with Al/Ta, Al/Cu, and Al liners. Symmetric liner implosion with quasi-isentropic compression to peak pressure ∼1000 GPa is achieved in all cases. These experiments exhibit unexpectedly softer behavior above 200 GPa, which we conjecture is related to differences in the actual and modeled properties of aluminum.

More Details

Exploring magnetized liner inertial fusion with a semi-analytic model

McBride, Ryan D.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Vesey, Roger A.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Cochrane, Kyle C.; Schmit, Paul S.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Martin, Matthew; Awe, Thomas J.; Rovang, Dean C.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Peterson, Kyle J.; Rochau, G.A.; Porter, John L.; Stygar, William A.; Cuneo, M.E.

Abstract not provided.

Exploring magnetized liner inertial fusion with a semi-analytic model

McBride, Ryan D.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Vesey, Roger A.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Cochrane, Kyle C.; Rovang, Dean C.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Schmit, Paul S.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Awe, Thomas J.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Martin, Matthew; Peterson, Kyle J.; Rochau, G.A.; Porter, John L.; Stygar, William A.; Cuneo, M.E.

Abstract not provided.

Direct observation of an abrupt insulator-to-metal transition in dense liquid deuterium

Science

Knudson, Marcus D.; Desjarlais, Michael P.; Becker, A.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Cochrane, Kyle C.; Savage, Mark E.; Bliss, David E.; Mattsson, Thomas M.; Redmer, R.

Eighty years ago, it was proposed that solid hydrogen would become metallic at sufficiently high density. Despite numerous investigations, this transition has not yet been experimentally observed. More recently, there has been much interest in the analog of this predicted metallic transition in the dense liquid, due to its relevance to planetary science. Here, we show direct observation of an abrupt insulator-to-metal transition in dense liquid deuterium. Experimental determination of the location of this transition provides a much-needed benchmark for theory and may constrain the region of hydrogen-helium immiscibility and the boundary-layer pressure in standard models of the internal structure of gas-giant planets.

More Details

Ethane-xenon mixtures under shock conditions

Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics

Magyar, Rudolph J.; Root, Seth R.; Cochrane, Kyle C.; Mattsson, Thomas M.; Flicker, Dawn G.

Mixtures of light elements with heavy elements are important in inertial confinement fusion. We explore the physics of molecular scale mixing through a validation study of equation of state (EOS) properties. Density functional theory molecular dynamics (DFT-MD) at elevated temperature and pressure is used to obtain the thermodynamic state properties of pure xenon, ethane, and various compressed mixture compositions along their principal Hugoniots. To validate these simulations, we have performed shock compression experiments using the Sandia Z-Machine. A bond tracking analysis correlates the sharp rise in the Hugoniot curve with the completion of dissociation in ethane. The DFT-based simulation results compare well with the experimental data along the principal Hugoniots and are used to provide insight into the dissociation and temperature along the Hugoniots as a function of mixture composition. Interestingly, we find that the compression ratio for complete dissociation is similar for several compositions suggesting a limiting compression for C-C bonded systems.

More Details

On the scaling of the magnetically accelerated flyer plate technique to currents greater than 20 MA

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Lemke, Raymond W.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Cochrane, Kyle C.; Desjarlais, Michael P.; Asay, J.R.

In this article we discuss scaling the magnetically accelerated flyer plate technique to currents greater than is available on the Z accelerator. Peak flyer plate speeds in the range 7-46 km/s are achieved in pulsed power driven, hyper-velocity impact experiments on Z for peak currents in the range 8-20 MA. The highest (lowest) speeds are produced using aluminum (aluminum-copper) flyer plates. In either case, the ≈1 mm thick flyer plate is shocklessly accelerated by magnetic pressure to ballistic speed in ≈400 ns; it arrives at the target with a fraction of material at standard density. During acceleration a melt front, due to resistive heating, moves from the drive-side toward the target-side of the flyer plate; the speed of the melt front increases with increasing current. Peak flyer speeds on Z scale quadratically (linearly) with current at the low (high) end of the range. Magnetohydrodynamic simulation shows that the change in scaling is due to geometric deformation, and that linear scaling continues as current increases. However, the combined effects of shockless acceleration and resistive heating lead to an upper bound on the magnetic field feasible for pulsed power driven flyer plate experiments, which limits the maximum possible speed of a useful flyer plate to < 100 km/s. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.

More Details

ALEGRA Update: Modernization and Resilience Progress

Robinson, Allen C.; Petney, Sharon P.; Drake, Richard R.; Weirs, Vincent G.; Adams, Brian M.; Vigil, Dena V.; Carpenter, John H.; Garasi, Christopher J.; Wong, Michael K.; Robbins, Joshua R.; Siefert, Christopher S.; Strack, Otto E.; Wills, Ann E.; Trucano, Timothy G.; Bochev, Pavel B.; Summers, Randall M.; Stewart, James R.; Ober, Curtis C.; Rider, William J.; Haill, Thomas A.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Cochrane, Kyle C.; Desjarlais, Michael P.; Love, Edward L.; Voth, Thomas E.; Mosso, Stewart J.; Niederhaus, John H.

Abstract not provided.

Results 51–75 of 91
Results 51–75 of 91