National Security Technologies (NSTec) is developing dense plasma focus (DPF) systems for applications requiring intense pulsed neutron sources. Sandia National Laboratories participated in a limited number of experiments with one of those systems. In collaboration with NSTec, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, we installed additional electrical and X-ray image measurements in parallel with normal operation of the system. Dense plasma focus machines have been studied for decades, but much of the experimental interest has been on neutron and X-ray yield. The primary goal for the present work was to develop and field high-fidelity and traceably-calibrated current and voltage measurements for comparison to digital simulations. The secondary goals were to utilize the current and voltage measurements to add general understanding of vacuum insulator behavior and current sheath dynamics. We also conducted initial scoping studies of soft X-ray diagnostics. We will show the electrical diagnostics and the techniques used to acquire high-fidelity signals in the difficult environment of the 2 MA, 6 μ plasma focus drive pulse. We will show how we measure accreted plasma mass non-invasively, and the sensitivity to background fill density. We will present initial qualitative results from filtered X-ray pinhole images and spectroscopic data from the pinch region.
We report on experiments demonstrating the transition from thermally-dominated K-shell line emission to non-thermal, hot-electron-driven inner-shell emission for z pinch plasmas on the Z machine. While x-ray yields from thermal K-shell emission decrease rapidly with increasing atomic number Z, we find that non-thermal emission persists with favorable Z scaling, dominating over thermal emission for Z=42 and higher (hn ≥ 17keV). Initial experiments with Mo (Z=42) and Ag (Z=47) have produced kJ-level emission in the 17-keV and 22-keV Kα lines respectively. We will discuss the electron beam properties that could excite these non - thermal lines. We also report on experiments that have attempted to control non - thermal K - shell line emission by modifying the wire array or load hardware setup.