Author_Institution :
Plasma Phys. & Nucl. Fusion Lab., Nat. Inst. for Laser, Plasma & Radiat. Phys., Bucharest, Romania
Abstract :
A 1-kJ vacuum-spark device has been developed as a pulsed X-ray source for applications in the field of microlithography, microscopy, flash radiography, etc. The optimization works for the pulsed soft-X-ray emission are presented. The optimization was made in two steps: 1) X-ray emission maximization and 2) X-ray emission reproducibility. For the X-ray emission maximization, the changed parameters were the main capacitor energy, the anode-cathode geometry, the anode material, and the trigger pulse amplitude. The best combination is 1 kJ for the main capacitor energy, a conical shape for the anode, 6-12 mm anode-cathode separation, iron for the anode material, and 14-15 kV for the trigger pulse amplitude. In these conditions, energies of up to 10 J per pulse are obtained in the 3-40 keV range for the X-ray pulses. In order to have a good reproducibility, a high-power, very fast, high-voltage trigger pulse is required. To fulfill these conditions, a pulse transformer and an air spark gap were added to the initial triggering device (a magnetic pulse compression circuit). With the new trigger pulse (20 J per pulse, 50-ns rise-time, 22-kV amplitude in an open circuit), an acceptable X-ray emission reproducibility was obtained
Keywords :
X-ray production; optimisation; pinch effect; pulsed power technology; sparks; 1 kJ; 10 J; 14 to 15 kV; 20 J; 22 kJ; 3 to 40 keV; 50 ns; 6 to 12 mm; X-ray emission maximization; X-ray emission reproducibility; air spark gap; anode material; anode-cathode geometry; anode-cathode separation; capacitor energy; conical shape; flash radiography; high-voltage trigger pulse; iron; microlithography; microscopy; open circuit; optimization; plasma pinch; pulse power systems; pulse transformer; pulsed X-ray source; pulsed soft X-ray emission; trigger pulse; trigger pulse amplitude; vacuum spark discharge; Anodes; Capacitors; Fault location; Geometry; Microscopy; Pulse circuits; Pulse transformers; Radiography; Reproducibility of results; Sparks;