Title :
MHD modeling of conductors at ultrahigh current density
Author :
Rosenthal, Stephen E. ; Desjarlais, Michael P. ; Spielman, Rick Bernard ; Stygar, W.A. ; Asay, J.R. ; Douglas, Melissa R. ; Hall, C.A. ; Frese, M.H. ; Morse, R.L. ; Reisman, D.B.
Author_Institution :
Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM, USA
fDate :
10/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In conjunction with ongoing high-current experiments on Sandia National Laboratories´ Z accelerator (Albuquerque, NM) we have revisited a problem first described in detail by Heinz Knoepfel (1970). Unlike the 1-Tesla MITL´s of pulsed power accelerators used to produce intense particle beams, Z´s disk, transmission line (downstream of the current addition) is in a 100-1200-Tesla regime; so its conductors cannot be modeled simply as static infinite conductivity boundaries. Using the MHD code MACH2 we have been investigating the conductor hydrodynamics, characterizing the joule heating, magnetic field diffusion, and material deformation, pressure, and velocity over a range of current densities, current rise-times, and conductor materials. The three purposes of this work are 1) to quantify power flow losses owing to ultrahigh magnetic fields, 2) to model the response of VISAR diagnostic samples in various configurations on Z, and 3) to incorporate the most appropriate equation of state and conductivity models into our magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) computations. Certain features are strongly dependent on the details of the conductivity model
Keywords :
plasma flow; plasma magnetohydrodynamics; pulsed power technology; 100 to 1200 T; MACH2 MHD code; MHD computation; MHD modeling; VISAR diagnostic samples; Z accelerator; conductivity models; conductor hydrodynamics; conductor materials; configurations; current densities; current rise-times; disk; equation of state; joule heating; magnetic field diffusion; magnetohydrodynamics computations; material deformation; power flow losses; pressure; static infinite conductivity boundaries; transmission line; ultrahigh current density; ultrahigh magnetic fields; velocity; Conducting materials; Conductivity; Conductors; Current density; Laboratories; Magnetic fields; Magnetic materials; Magnetohydrodynamics; Particle accelerators; Particle beams;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on