Multi-frame synchrotron based radiography of instability growth in pulsed power driven HEDP experiments

ORAL

Abstract

We present the first use of multi-frame radiography from a high intensity synchrotron source to analyse the pulsed power driven explosion of wires placed in a water bath. This has enabled detailed measurements of multiple physical features, including the development of striations in the warm, dense matter of the exploding wires and, by interacting the wires with strong shock waves, detailed measurements of the growth of Richmeyer Meshkov instabilities.

Experiments utilised the ID19 beamline at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility and imaged 200µm diameter aluminium and tungsten wires exploded by a compact 30kA, 500ns current source. The high coherence of the ~30KeV probing radiation enabled beam propagation phase contrast imaging to be employed, allowing shockwaves launched by the exploding wires into the water bath and details of material inside the wires to be simultaneously captured with resolutions up to 8µm. Each experiment could have up to 128 frames of data, 0.1ns in duration, separated 704ns, and in future far faster frames could be employed.

*This work was sponsored by ESRF, Sandia National Laboratories, First Light Fusion, EPSRC and NNSA under DOE Cooperative Agreement Nos. DE-NA0003764 and DE-SC0018088

Presenters

  • Simon N Bland

    • Imperial College London
    • Imperial College London, Multi-university Center for Pulsed Power-Driven High Energy Science

Authors

  • Simon N Bland

    • Imperial College London
    • Imperial College London, Multi-university Center for Pulsed Power-Driven High Energy Science
  • David Yanuka

    • Imperial College London, part of the Multi-University Center of Excellence for Pulsed Power-Driven High Energy Density Science
    • Imperial College London
    • Blackett Laboratory, Imperial College London, Multi-university Center for Pulsed Power-Driven High Energy Science
  • Alexander Rososhek

    • Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
  • Savva Theocharous

    • Imperial College London
  • Yakov E Krasik

    • Technion - Israel Institute of Technology
  • Jeremy Chittenden

    • Imperial College London
  • Kristopher McGlinchey

    • Imperial College London
  • Margie Olbinado

    • European Synchrotron Radiation Facility
  • Alexander Rack

    • European Synchrotron Radiation Facility