Retrieving Transport Properties from Multiscale HED Flows using X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS)
ORAL
Abstract
Using coherent x-rays sources, X-ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy (XPCS) can measure microscopic transport properties by probing the time correlation of density fluctuations. This is particularly challenging under high-energy-density (HED) conditions because of the extremely fast timescales and the multiscale shear commonly induced to achieve HED conditions using shock compression. We develop a theoretical framework for utilizing XPCS to study material diffusivity in multiscale flow environments. We derive a timescale that captures the combination of shear and diffusion dynamics across a wide range of lengthscales. Our theory is validated through synthetic XPCS. We demonstrate the versatility of our approach across several orders of magnitude in timescales using sequential-pulse XPCS, single-pulse X-ray Speckle Visibility Spectroscopy (XSVS), and double-pulse XSVS. Our framework enables the concurrent measurements of diffusion coefficients due to microscopic physics and characteristic macroscopic velocities and establishes the theoretical foundation for XPCS as a promising diagnostic for HED systems.
*This work was supported by CMAP, an NSF Physics Frontiers Center, under grant PHY-2020249. Partial support from grants DE-SC0020229, DE-NA0004134, PHY-2206380, and CBET-2143702 is also acknowledged.
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Presenters
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Hao Yin
- University of Rochester