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Transmission line and electromagnetic models of the Mykonos-2 accelerator

Digest of Technical Papers-IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference

Madrid, E.A.; Miller, C.L.; Rose, D.V.; Welch, D.R.; Clark, R.E.; Mostrom, C.B.; Stygar, William A.; Savage, Mark E.; Hinshelwood, D.D.; LeChien, K.R.

Mykonos is a linear transformer driver (LTD) pulsed power accelerator currently undergoing testing at Sandia National Laboratories. Mykonos-2, the initial configuration, includes two 1-MA, 200-kV LTD cavities driving a water-filled transmission line terminated by a resistive load. Transmission line and 3D electromagnetic (EM) simulation models of high-current LTD cavities have been developed [D.V. Rose et al. Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 13, 90401 (2010)]. These models have been used to develop an equivalent two-cavity transmission line model of Mykonos-2 using the BERTHA transmission line code. The model explicitly includes 40 bricks per cavity and detailed representations of the water-filled transmission line and resistive load. (A brick consists of two capacitors and a switch connected in series.) This model is compared to 3D EM simulations of the entire accelerator including detailed representations of the individual capacitors and switches in each cavity. Good agreement is obtained between the two simulation models and both models are in good agreement with preliminary data from Mykonos-2. © 2011 IEEE.

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Temporally shaped current pulses on a two-cavity linear transformer driver system

Digest of Technical Papers-IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference

Savage, Mark E.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; LeChien, K.R.; Stoltzfus, Brian S.; Stygar, William A.; Fowler, William E.; Madrid, E.A.; Miller, C.L.; Rose, D.V.

An important application for low impedance pulsed power drivers is creating high pressures for shock compression of solids. These experiments are useful for studying material properties under kilobar to megabar pressures. The Z driver at Sandia National Laboratories has been used for such studies on a variety of materials, including heavy water, diamond, and tantalum, to name a few. In such experiments, it is important to prevent shock formation in the material samples. Shocks can form as the sound speed increases with loading; at some depth in the sample a pressure significantly higher than the surface pressure can result. The optimum pressure pulse shape to prevent such shocks depends on the test material and the sample thickness, and is generally not a simple sinusoidal-shaped current as a function of time. A system that can create a variety of pulse shapes would be desirable for testing various materials and sample thicknesses. A large number of relatively fast pulses, combined, could create the widest variety of pulse shapes. Linear transformer driver systems, whose cavities consist of many parallel capacitor-switch circuits, could have considerable agility in pulse shape. © 2011 IEEE.

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LDRD final report on confinement of cluster fusion plasmas with magnetic fields

Struve, Kenneth W.; Headley, Daniel I.; Savage, Mark E.; Stoltzfus, Brian S.; Kellogg, Jeffrey W.

Two versions of a current driver for single-turn, single-use 1-cm diameter magnetic field coils have been built and tested at the Sandia National Laboratories for use with cluster fusion experiments at the University of Texas in Austin. These coils are used to provide axial magnetic fields to slow radial loss of electrons from laser-produced deuterium plasmas. Typical peak field strength achievable for the two-capacitor system is 50 T, and 200 T for the ten-capacitor system. Current rise time for both systems is about 1.7 {mu}s, with peak current of 500 kA and 2 MA, respectively. Because the coil must be brought to the laser, the driver needs to be portable and drive currents in vacuum. The drivers are complete but laser-plasma experiments are still in progress. Therefore, in this report, we focus on system design, initial tests, and performance characteristics of the two-capacitor and ten-capacitors systems. The questions of whether a 200 T magnetic field can retard the breakup of a cluster-fusion plasma, and whether this field can enhance neutron production have not yet been answered. However, tools have been developed that will enable producing the magnetic fields needed to answer these questions. These are a two-capacitor, 400-kA system that was delivered to the University of Texas in 2010, and a 2-MA ten-capacitor system delivered this year. The first system allowed initial testing, and the second system will be able to produce the 200 T magnetic fields needed for cluster fusion experiments with a petawatt laser. The prototype 400-kA magnetic field driver system was designed and built to test the design concept for the system, and to verify that a portable driver system could be built that delivers current to a magnetic field coil in vacuum. This system was built copying a design from a fixed-facility, high-field machine at LANL, but made to be portable and to use a Z-machine-like vacuum insulator and vacuum transmission line. This system was sent to the University of Texas in Austin where magnetic fields up to 50 T have been produced in vacuum. Peak charge voltage and current for this system have been 100 kV and 490 kA. It was used this last year to verify injection of deuterium and surrogate clusters into these small, single-turn coils without shorting the coil. Initial test confirmed the need to insulate the inner surface of the coil, which requires that the clusters must be injected through small holes in an insulator. Tests with a low power laser confirmed that it is possible to inject clusters into the magnetic field coils through these holes without destroying the clusters. The university team also learned the necessity of maintaining good vacuum to avoid insulator, transmission line, and coil shorting. A 200-T, 2 MA system was also constructed using the experience from the first design to make the pulsed-power system more robust. This machine is a copy of the prototype design, but with ten 100-kV capacitors versus the two used in the prototype. It has additional inductance in the switch/capacitor unit to avoid breakdown seen in the prototype design. It also has slightly more inductance at the cable connection to the vacuum chamber. With this design we have been able to demonstrate 1 MA current into a 1 cm diameter coil with the vacuum chamber at air pressure. Circuit code simulations, including the additional inductance with the new design, agree well with the measured current at a charge voltage of 40 kV with a short circuit load, and at 50 kV with a coil. The code also predicts that with a charge voltage of 97 kV we will be able to get 2 MA into a 1 cm diameter coil, which will be sufficient for 200 T fields. Smaller diameter or multiple-turn coils will be able to achieve even higher fields, or be able to achieve 200-T fields with lower charge voltage. Work is now proceeding at the university under separate funding to verify operation at the 2-MA level, and to address issues of debris mitigation, measurement of the magnetic field, and operation in vacuum. We anticipate operation at full current with single-turn, magnetic field coils this fall, with 200 T experiments on the Texas Petawatt laser in the spring of 2012.

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Measurements of Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth in initially solid liners on the Z facility

Sinars, Daniel S.; Edens, Aaron E.; Lopez, Mike R.; Smith, Ian C.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Shores, Jonathon S.; Bennett, Guy R.; Atherton, B.W.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Cuneo, M.E.; Peterson, Kyle J.; McBride, Ryan D.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Vesey, Roger A.; Nakhleh, Charles N.

Abstract not provided.

Measurements of magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth during the implosion of initially solid metal liners

Physics of Plasmas

Sinars, Daniel S.; Edens, Aaron E.; Lopez, Mike R.; Smith, Ian C.; Shores, Jonathon S.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Bennett, Guy R.; Atherton, B.W.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; Herrmann, Mark H.; McBride, Ryan D.; Cuneo, M.E.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Peterson, Kyle J.; Vesey, Roger A.; Nakhleh, Charles N.

Abstract not provided.

Total x-ray power improvement on recent wire array experiments on the Z machine

Jones, Michael J.; Ampleford, David A.; Cuneo, M.E.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Jones, Brent M.; Lopez, Mike R.; Rochau, G.A.; Savage, Mark E.

Recent experiments on the refurbished Z-machine were conducted using large diameter stainless steel arrays which produced x-ray powers of 260 TW. Follow-up experiments were then conducted utilizing tungsten wires with approximately the same total mass with the hypothesis that the total x-ray power would increase. On the large diameter tungsten experiments, the x-ray power averaged over 300 TW and the total x-ray energy was greater than 2MJ. Different analysis techniques for inferring the x-ray power will be described in detail.

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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, George R.; Savage, Mark E.; Struve, Kenneth W.; 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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Measurements of Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth in solid liners on the 20 MA Z facility

Sinars, Daniel S.; Edens, Aaron E.; Lopez, Mike R.; Smith, Ian C.; Shores, Jonathon S.; Bennett, Guy R.; Atherton, B.W.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Cuneo, M.E.; Peterson, Kyle J.; McBride, Ryan D.; Vesey, Roger A.; Nakhleh, Charles N.; Tomlinson, Kurt T.

The magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor (MRT) instability is the most important instability for determining whether a cylindrical liner can be compressed to its axis in a relatively intact form, a requirement for achieving the high pressures needed for inertial confinement fusion (ICF) and other high energy-density physics applications. While there are many published RT studies, there are a handful of well-characterized MRT experiments at time scales >1 {micro}s and none for 100 ns z-pinch implosions. Experiments used solid Al liners with outer radii of 3.16 mm and thicknesses of 292 {micro}m, dimensions similar to magnetically-driven ICF target designs [1]. In most tests the MRT instability was seeded with sinusoidal perturbations ({lambda} = 200, 400 {micro}m, peak-to-valley amplitudes of 10, 20 {micro}m, respectively), wavelengths similar to those predicted to dominate near stagnation. Radiographs show the evolution of the MRT instability and the effects of current-induced ablation of mass from the liner surface. Additional Al liner tests used 25-200 {micro}m wavelengths and flat surfaces. Codes being used to design magnetized liner ICF loads [1] match the features seen except at the smallest scales (<50 {micro}m). Recent experiments used Be liners to enable penetrating radiography using the same 6.151 keV diagnostics and provide an in-flight measurement of the liner density profile.

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Expected result of firing an ICE load on Z without vacuum

Struve, Kenneth W.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Savage, Mark E.

In addressing the issue of the determining the hazard categorization of the Z Accelerator of doing Special Nuclear Material (SNM) experiments the question arose as to whether the machine could be fired with its central vacuum chamber open, thus providing a path for airborne release of SNM materials. In this report we summarize calculations that show that we could only expect a maximum current of 460 kA into such a load in a long-pulse mode, which will be used for the SNM experiments, and 750 kA in a short-pulse mode, which is not useful for these experiments. We also investigated the effect of the current for both cases and found that for neither case is the current high enough to either melt or vaporize these loads, with a melt threshold of 1.6 MA. Therefore, a necessary condition to melt, vaporize, or otherwise disperse SNM material is that a vacuum must exist in the Z vacuum chamber. Thus the vacuum chamber serves as a passive feature that prevents any airborne release during the shot, regardless of whatever containment may be in place.

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Low impedance z-pinch drivers without post-hole convolute current adders

Savage, Mark E.

Present-day pulsed-power systems operating in the terawatt regime typically use post-hole convolute current adders to operate at sufficiently low impedance. These adders necessarily involve magnetic nulls that connect the positive and negative electrodes. The resultant loss of magnetic insulation results in electron losses in the vicinity of the nulls that can severely limit the efficiency of the delivery of the system's energy to a load. In this report, we describe an alternate transformer-based approach to obtaining low impedance. The transformer consists of coils whose windings are in parallel rather than in series, and does not suffer from the presence of magnetic nulls. By varying the pitch of the coils windings, the current multiplication ratio can be varied, leading to a more versatile driver. The coupling efficiency of the transformer, its behavior in the presence of electron flow, and its mechanical strength are issues that need to be addressed to evaluate the potential of transformer-based current multiplication as a viable alternative to conventional current adder technology.

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High reliability low jitter 80 kV pulse generator

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

Savage, Mark E.; Stoltzfus, Brian S.

Switching can be considered to be the essence of pulsed power. Time accurate switch/trigger systems with low inductance are useful in many applications. This article describes a unique switch geometry coupled with a low-inductance capacitive energy store. The system provides a fast-rising high voltage pulse into a low impedance load. It can be challenging to generate high voltage (more than 50 kilovolts) into impedances less than 10 {Omega}, from a low voltage control signal with a fast rise time and high temporal accuracy. The required power amplification is large, and is usually accomplished with multiple stages. The multiple stages can adversely affect the temporal accuracy and the reliability of the system. In the present application, a highly reliable and low jitter trigger generator was required for the Z pulsed-power facility [M. E. Savage, L. F. Bennett, D. E. Bliss, W. T. Clark, R. S. Coats,J. M. Elizondo, K. R. LeChien, H. C. Harjes, J. M. Lehr, J. E. Maenchen, D. H. McDaniel, M. F. Pasik, T. D. Pointon, A. C. Owen, D. B. Seidel, D. L. Smith, B. S. Stoltzfus, K.W. Struve, W.A. Stygar, L.K. Warne, and J. R. Woodworth, 2007 IEEE Pulsed Power Conference, Albuquerque, NM (IEEE, Piscataway, NJ, 2007), p. 979]. The large investment in each Z experiment demands low prefire probability and low jitter simultaneously. The system described here is based on a 100 kV DC-charged high-pressure spark gap, triggered with an ultraviolet laser. The system uses a single optical path for simultaneously triggering two parallel switches, allowing lower inductance and electrode erosion with a simple optical system. Performance of the system includes 6 ns output rise time into 5.6 {Omega}, 550 ps one-sigma jitter measured from the 5 V trigger to the high voltage output, and misfire probability less than 10{sup -4}. The design of the system and some key measurements will be shown in the paper. We will discuss the design goals related to high reliability and low jitter. While reliability is usually important, and is coupled with jitter, reliability is seldom given more than a qualitative analysis (if any at all). We will show how reliability of the system was calculated, and results of a jitter-reliability tradeoff study. We will describe the behavior of sulfur hexafluoride as the insulating gas in the mildly nonuniform field geometry at pressures of 300 to 500 kPa. We will show the resistance of the arc channels, and show the performance comparisons with normal two-channel operation, and single channel operation.

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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 S.; Woodworth, Joseph R.; Fowler, William E.; LeChien, Keith R.; Long, Finis W.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; McKee, George R.; Mckenney, John M.; 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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Precision electron flow measurements in a disk transmission line

Savage, Mark E.; Pointon, Timothy D.; Stoltzfus, Brian S.

An analytic model for electron flow in a system driving a fixed inductive load is described and evaluated with particle in cell simulations. The simple model allows determining the impedance profile for a magnetically insulated transmission line given the minimum gap desired, and the lumped inductance inside the transition to the minimum gap. The model allows specifying the relative electron flow along the power flow direction, including cases where the fractional electron flow decreases in the power flow direction. The electrons are able to return to the cathode because they gain energy from the temporally rising magnetic field. The simulations were done with small cell size to reduce numerical heating. An experiment to compare electron flow to the simulations was done. The measured electron flow is {approx}33% of the value from the simulations. The discrepancy is assumed to be due to a reversed electric field at the cathode because of the inductive load and falling electron drift velocity in the power flow direction. The simulations constrain the cathode electric field to zero, which gives the highest possible electron flow.

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Initial design and results from an ion current collection diagnostic for the triggered plasma opening switch experiment

Digest of Technical Papers-IEEE International Pulsed Power Conference

Jackson, D.; Savage, Mark E.; Seidel, D.; Mendel, C.; Gilmore, M.

Study of the Triggered Plasma Opening Switch (TPOS) characteristics is in progress via an ion current collection diagnostic (ICCD), in addition to offline apparatus. This initial ion current collection diagnostic has been designed, fabricated, and tested on the TPOS in order to explore the opening profile of the main switch. The initial ion current collection device utilizes five collectors which are positioned perpendicularly to the main switch stage in order to collect radially traveling ions. It has been shown through analytical prowess that this specific geometry can be treated as a planar case of the Child-Langmuir law with only a 6% deviation from the cylindrical case. Additionally, magnetostatic simulations with self consistent space charge emitting surfaces of the main switch using the Trak code are under way. It is hoped that the simulations will provide evidence in support of both the analytical derivations and experimental data. Finally, an improved design of the ICCD (containing 12 collectors in the axial direction) is presently being implemented. © 2005 IEEE.

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Results 101–150 of 195
Results 101–150 of 195