DocumentCode :
1648557
Title :
K-shell X-ray performance and load risk projections for future super-power generators
Author :
Mosher, D. ; Commisso, R.J. ; Qi, N. ; Krishnan, Mohan
Author_Institution :
Div. of Plasma Phys., Naval Res. Lab., Washington, DC, USA
fYear :
1998
Firstpage :
265
Abstract :
Summary form only given. During the past two decades, 100-ns-duration pulsed power has been used to produce intense sources of K-shell X-radiation from the z-pinch implosion of high-atomic-number annular gas-puff and wire-array loads. For initial annular radii of a few cm or less, and currents in the 0.5- to 10-MA range, experimental K-shell yields are in factor-of-two agreement with low-dimensional modeling of the implosion dynamics and radiation processes. For initial radii larger than a few cm, experiments indicate a reduction in K-shell yield, likely associated with multi-dimensional instability and asymmetry effects. However, efficient K-shell emission from long-implosion-time or high-photon-energy loads requires large radii. For the 300-ns current-rise-time DSWA DECADE driver, large radii are required for sufficient implosion velocities to excite the argon K-shell in 200- to 300-ns implosions. For 100-ns implosions on the proposed SNL X-1 base-line driver, large radii are required to achieve very high implosion velocities for excitation of X-rays in the several-10s-of-keV regime. For such cases, both K-shell yield and the associated load risk increase strongly with radius. Were, a simple two-level model for K-shell scaling, coupled to a circuit model driving a slug-model implosion, and benchmarked against experiments on Hawk, Saturn, and Z, is used to estimate yield as a function of load radius, and therefore risk, for future drivers. The increased yield at smaller radius (and reduced load risk) provided by a reduced current rise time (at increased pulsed power risk) is also quantified. The approach presented here demonstrates a simple tool useful to experimentalists and pulsed power designers who wish to estimate within about a factor-of-two how K-shell radiation scales with generator and load parameters.
Keywords :
Z pinch; exploding wires; pulsed power technology; 0.5 to 10 MA; 100 ns; 200 to 300 ns; Ar; Ar K-shell; DSWA DECADE driver; Hawk; K-shell X-radiation; K-shell X-ray performance; K-shell emission; K-shell radiation scaling; K-shell yields; SNL X-1 base-line driver; Saturn; Z; asymmetry effects; generator parameters; high-atomic-number annular gas-puff; high-photon-energy loads; implosion dynamics; implosion velocities; initial annular radii; load parameters; load risk projections; long-implosion-time loads; low-dimensional modeling; multi-dimensional instability; pulsed power; radiation processes; slug-model implosion; super-power generators; two-level model; wire-array loads; z-pinch implosion; Plasma density; Plasma x-ray sources; Weapons;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 1998. 25th Anniversary. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. 1998 IEEE International on
Conference_Location :
Raleigh, NC, USA
ISSN :
0730-9244
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4792-7
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.1998.677832
Filename :
677832
Link To Document :
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