CP620, Shock Compression of Condensed Matter - 2001 edited by M. D. Furnish, N. N. Thadhani, and Y. Horie © 2002 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0068-7/02/$ 19.00 LASER TRIGGERED SYNCHRONIZABLE X-RAY SYSTEM FOR REAL TIME STUDY OF SHOCK WAVES IN CONDENSED MATERIALS J. Paul Farrell, K. Batchelor, V. Dudnikov, T. Srinivasan-Rao*, J. Smedley* and J. McDonald** Brookhaven Technology Group, Inc. 120 Lake Ave. South, Nesconset, NY 11767 *Brookhaven National Laboratory* Upton, NY 11973 **Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, OPO Box 999 Richland, WA 99352 Abstract A laser excited, sub-nanosecond, pulsed, electron beam system is described. The system consists of a high voltage pulser and a coaxial laser triggered gas or liquid spark gap. The spark gap discharges into a pulse forming line designed to produce and maintain a flat voltage pulse for 1 ns or greater duration on the cathode of a photodiode. A synchronized pulsed laser is used to illuminate the photo-cathode to produce an electron beam with very high brightness, short duration and current at or near the space charge limit. The system can be configured to operate at energies from less than 500 keV to 1 MeV and pulse width from less than 10 ps to 1000 ps and higher. This laser controlled electron beam system can be used to produce synchronizable monochromatic fluorescent or broad spectrum Bremsstrahlung x-rays for shock wave studies. INTRODUCTION Dynamic studies of shock compression utilize fluorescent x-rays from flash x-ray sources to characterize the change in lattice constant and other transient properties (1). These real time x-ray diffraction measurements require close synchronization of the x-ray source with the transient shock wave. The times of interest for these studies are a few nanoseconds to sub-nanosecond and lower. The laser excited photo-diode system described here produces synchronizable short pulse electron and photon beams in this time interval. Since the system uses laser excitation to generate an axial electron beam, the x-ray pulse duration, photon number and source dimension are determined by the corresponding characteristics of the laser. Since the cathode and anode are not damaged in the pulse discharge, they can be used for thousands of shots without the need for replacement. TECHNICAL DESCRIPTION The system described here was initially designed as an electron gun for advanced high- energy electron accelerators (2). Figure 1 is a block diagram of the complete system. It is comprised of a master timer, a laser system that includes a laser amplifier and optical pulse compressor, a high voltage pulse power supply, a pulse forming line and a photo-diode electron gun. In this high voltage (2 MV) variant, the output of the high voltage power supply is terminated in a spark gap that discharges into the pulse forming line. In a low voltage (300 kV to 500 kV) system, all spark gaps would be replaced by solid-state switches. Figure 1. Block diagram of the laser controlled x-ray system, In operation, the master timer sends trigger pulses with appropriate delays to the laser and the high voltage pulser. The laser output is split into two components; one (100 ps at 1064 nm) travels up the axis of the high voltage pulser and is timed to arrive at the triggered spark gap at or near the peak of the high voltage output waveform. The second component is amplified, time compressed and its frequency is adjusted (~ 255 nm) to optimise photoemission from the cathode of the photodiode. The pulse forming line (PFL) is terminated with a low inductance characteristic impedance to prevent reflection. In the 2 MV high voltage pulser, the PFL is designed to produce a sustained flat top (< 5%) output voltage of ~ 1 ns duration. The second laser component is time delayed to arrive at the photocathode during the 1 ns pulse on time. By triggering the output spark gap with the same laser that is used to photo excite the cathode, a very high level of synchronization ( < ~ 100 ps jitter) in emission of electron current and arrival of the voltage pulse is achieved. Forming System A general view showing the shape and dimensions of the 2 MV pulsed power supply is shown in Figure 2. The pulser is an integral unit comprising the following components: • • • • A metal casing A pulse generator (100 kV) for exciting the primary winding of the pulse transformer A pulse transformer A pulse forming line for generating the short (~1 ns) high-voltage pulse Loser Trigger input HV Pulse Transformer A Figure 3, Photograph of the pulsed power supply system. The 2 MV system shown here is 2.5 meters long and 1.22 meters high by ~ 1 meter wide. The welded casing forms the framework onto which all of the other parts of the pulser are mounted. The upper section, which is not sealed, houses a solid dielectric cylinder that forms a support for the pulse transformer winding. The side and end plates of this section of the casing are detachable to allow access to the components of the low voltage 100 kV pulse generator that drives the high voltage pulse transformer in the upper section. Figure 2 General view of the 5 MV Pulsed Power Supply System When operated as a synchronizable flash x-ray source, electrons emitted from the photo cathode travel 2 to 3 mm to the anode, which is also the x-ray producing target. Since the cathode does not dump all its charge into the anode, the electron energy remains nearly constant during the current pulse. This results in increased fluorescent photon yield and virtually eliminates destruction of the anode and cathode surfaces that is observed in standard flash x-ray devices. FLUORESCENT X-RAY SOURCE FOR DIAGNOSTIC OF SHOCK WAVES The pulse length and spot size of this beam based x-ray source is determined by the corresponding pulse length and spot size of the 1186 laser beam on the photo-cathode. A typical source spot size would be ~ 1 mm to 2 mm in diameter. This small spot size provides a very high photon flux density at the source. arrival of the shock wave and the diagnostic x-ray pulse. CONCLUSION The same basic design concepts of laser excited electron emission and synchronized high voltage pulsed systems that are used in this state-of-art high voltage electron gun can be used to produce synchronized x-ray pulses for real time study of shock waves in condensed materials. A complete xray system operating at 300 kV to 500 kV uses all solid-state components. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT This work is supported, in part, by the U.S. Department of Energy in the following contracts: DE-FG02-97ER8233, DE-AC02-98CH10886 and DE-AC06-76RLO-1830. Qffl 0,1 10 » WCtDEMT ELECTRON ENERQtt MtV REFERENCES Figure 3. Dependence of K x-ray yield from thick targets of Z = 4 to 79 on incident electron energy. (From F. H. Attix 1986.) 1. Y.M. Gupta, K.A. Zimmerman, P.A. Rigg, E.B. Zaretsky, D.M. Savage and P.M. Bellamy, Experimental developments to obtain real-time x-ray diffraction measurements in plate impact experiments. Rev. Sci. Instr. 70, No. 10, p 4008-4013 (1999). Using a conventional solid-state laser system, an electron charge of ~ 50 nC can be drawn from the cathode without significant voltage droop. The K xray yield from thick targets of Z = 4 to 79 are shown in Figure 4 (3). From the figure it can be seen that the yield of 4.5 keV photons peaks at ~ 2 x 10~3 x-rays/sr/electron at an electron energy of ~ 150 keV. This corresponds to ~ 0.6 x 10y photons/sr/pulse for a 50 nC electron bunch. 2. Kenneth Batchelor, J. Paul Farrell, R. Conde, T. Srinivasan-Rao and J. Smedley, A Laser Triggered Synchronizable, Sub-Nanosecond Pulsed Electron Source, Proc. of International Conf. on Future Accelerators, Stony Brook, NY (June 2001). To be published. Experiments are needed to determine if the total photon yield from this short pulse high brightness photon source is sufficient signal for real time x-ray diffraction studies. 3. J.H. Sparow and C.D. Dick, The development and application of monoenergetic x-ray sources. Report NBS SP456 (1976) and reproduced in Introduction to Radiological Physics and Radiation Dosimetry, F.H. Attix, John Wiley & Sons, New York p. 209 (1986). An advantage of this laser synchronized x-ray source is that the system is easily adapted to include both plate impact and laser induced shocks. The same laser that is used to induce a shock in the sample could be used to photo-excite the cathode of the electron gun To produce laser induced shocks. This approach has the possibility of achieving a very high degree of synchronization between the 1187
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