학술논문

Spatially resolved measurements of load current delivery on a 14 MA, 100 ns pulsed power experiment using a line-imaging velocity interferometer
Document Type
article
Source
Physical Review Accelerators and Beams, Vol 26, Iss 7, p 070401 (2023)
Subject
Nuclear and particle physics. Atomic energy. Radioactivity
QC770-798
Language
English
ISSN
2469-9888
Abstract
Pulsed power generators create high-energy-density conditions by rapidly delivering an immense pulse of electrical current to a compact imploding load. Accurately measuring the shape and amplitude of this load current pulse is essential to understanding the behavior of all pulsed power experiments. At the Z Pulsed Power Facility, the closest-in load current measurements are provided by velocimetry techniques such as VISAR (velocity interferometer system for any reflector) and PDV (photonic Doppler velocimetry). Here, fiber-coupled interferometers measure the velocity history of an exploding metallic flyer plate that is embedded in the vertical walls of the current return can. The flyer plate is driven outward by the magnetic pressure from the load current such that magnetohydrodynamic modeling can be used to determine the load current waveform from the measured velocity history. In this paper, we present the first load current velocimetry measurements to be made from the horizontal top flyer plate that carries current radially inward from the return can to the load. These spatially resolved measurements, which span R=5–9 mm, are enabled by a transformative new velocimetry diagnostic—a line-imaging velocity interferometer called Z Line VISAR (ZLV)—whose optical performance overcomes the measurement challenges presented by the steep velocity gradients encountered on the top flyer plate. To validate ZLV’s capabilities, a 14-MA, 100-ns experiment was conducted to losslessly couple current up the return can and radially inward across the top flyer plate. Comparisons between the ZLV data obtained from this experiment and two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic simulations driven with the current measured on the return can indicate that the current delivery across the top flyer plate is indeed lossless to within the few-percent uncertainty of the ZLV data. Given that the current coupling is lossless, the experimental results are used to demonstrate that one-dimensional current unfold techniques can be applied to generate a radially resolved load current map from the ZLV velocity data. This analysis provides a template for how to use the ZLV diagnostic to determine the efficacy of current delivery in future experiments where losses may occur in close proximity to the load.