Experimental Method for Laser-driven Flyer Plates for 1-D Shocks using the TRIDENT Laser
ORAL
Abstract
One-dimensional shocks can be generated using flyer plates accelerated to terminal velocities by a confined laser-ablated plasma. Over the past few years, we have developed this capability with our facility-size laser, TRIDENT, capable of $>$ 500 Joules at multi-microsecond pulse lengths to accelerate 1-D flyer plates, 8-mm diameter by 0.1 -- 2 mm thick. Plates have be accelerated to terminal velocities of 100 to $>$500 m/s, with full recovery of the flyer and target for post mortem metallography. By properly tailoring the laser temporal and spatial profile, the expanding confined plasma accelerates the plate away from the transparent sapphire substrate, and decouples the laser parameters from shock pressure profile resulting from the plate impact on a target. Since the flyer plate is in free flight on impact with the target, minimal collateral damage occurs to either. The experimental method to launch these plates to terminal velocity, ancillary diagnostics, models, and representative experimental data will be presented. LA-UR-07-1111
–
Authors
-
Dennis Paisley
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Shengnian Luo
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Lab
-
Damian Swift
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Scott Greenfield
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Eric Loomis
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Randall Johnson
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Pedro Peralta
Arizona State University, Los Alamos National Laboratory