Probing Crystal Structural Transitions in High Energy Density Materials Using Time-Resolved X-Ray Diffraction on the OMEGA EP Laser
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
A method of measuring multiple temporally resolved powder x-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements during a single laser experiment has been demonstrated on shock-compressed iron and ramp-compressed Zr at the Omega EP Laser Facility. Using a variation of the time-integrating powder XRD image-plate configuration, up to four temporally resolved snapshots of the XRD pattern are collected on an x-ray framing camera with a 2θ scattering angle coverage of 48° to 65° with a 400-ps temporal resolution.[1] The experimental configuration allows for simultaneous velocimetry, time-integrated image-plate XRD, and time-resolved XRD. Time resolution on a single sample affords the opportunity to probe transitions under evolving hydrodynamic conditions, time-dependent properties such as elastic and plastic deformation, stochastic processes such as phase nucleation and growth, and the temporal evolution of kinetically hindered transitions. X ray diffraction snapshots capture the transformation to a high-pressure β phase in ramp-compressed Zr, constraining the atomic structure evolution in a single shot.
[1] J. R. Rygg et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 83, 113904 (2012).
*This material is based upon work supported by the Department of Energy [National Nuclear Security Administration] University of Rochester "National Inertial Confinement Fusion Program" under Award Number(s) DE-NA0004144.
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Presenters
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Danae N Polsin
- University of Rochester