Studies of soft x-ray transmission through grid supported CH layers

ORAL

Abstract

Recent experiments have shown that it may be possible to use laser-heated high-Z foils to drive new radiation transport (RadTran) experiments in gas fill tubes. These tubes must be pressurized above 1atm and the x-ray source needs to be physically separated from the gas. To achieve this, a grid-supported CH seal is implemented. The grid reduces the total surface area of the gas-seal interaction region lowering the thickness requirements for the CH layer. However, as mesh spacing is reduced, hole closure from wire ablation may reduce the x-ray flux. To optimize the seal design, experiments were performed measuring x-ray transmission through CH layers supported by meshes composed of copper, gold, or stainless steel and using hexagonal or square mesh geometries. The x-ray source was formed by heating a 0.5 μm thick planar gold foil with a 4 ns laser pulse at an intensity of 2$\times$10$^{14}W/cm2$. Emission data was collected using an x-ray framing camera and a Dante photodiode array. Experiments show that the CH layers can reach effective temperatures of nearly 100 eV but mesh design significantly affects performance, with a nearly 20 eV difference between the best and worst performing seal targets. This talk will discuss our findings and their impact on future RadTran experiments.

*This work is funded by the U.S. DOE, through the NNSA-DS and SC-OFES Joint Program in HED Laboratory Plasmas, grant number DE-NA0001840, the National LUFP, grant number DE-NA0000850, and through NNSA/OICF under Cooperatvie Agreement No. DE-FC52-08NA2830

Authors

  • Josh Davis

    • Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor
    • Naval Surface Warfare Center/University of Michigan
    • University of Michigan
  • Paul Keiter

    • Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor
    • University of Michigan
  • Sallee Klein

    • University of Michigan
    • Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor
  • Y. Frank

    • Soreq Nuclear Research Center
  • R. Paul Drake

    • Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor
    • University of Michigan
  • Dov Shvarts

    • University of Michigan
    • University of Michigan; Nuclear Research Center – NEGEV, Israel
    • Nuclear Research Center-Negev, University of Michigan
    • University of Michigan, Nuclear Research Center-Negev, Israel
    • University of Michigan; NRCN
    • Univ of Michigan - Ann Arbor and Nuclear Research Center-Negev, Israel
    • University of Michigan, Nuclear Resreach Center-Negev, Israel
    • Nuclear Research Center-Negev, Israel