Irradiation of Materials using Short, Intense Ion Beams

ORAL

Abstract

We present experiments studying material properties created with nanosecond and millimeter-scale ion beam pulses on the Neutralized Drift Compression Experiment-II at Berkeley Lab. The explored scientific topics include the dynamics of ion induced damage in materials, materials synthesis far from equilibrium, warm dense matter and intense beam-plasma physics. We describe the improved accelerator performance, diagnostics and results of beam-induced irradiation of thin samples of, e.g., tin and silicon. Bunches with \textgreater 3x10$^{\mathrm{10}}$ ions/pulse with 1-mm radius and 2-30 ns FWHM duration and have been created. To achieve the short pulse durations and mm-scale focal spot radii, the 1.2 MeV He$^{\mathrm{+}}$ ion beam is neutralized in a drift compression section which removes the space charge defocusing effect during the final compression and focusing. Quantitative comparison of detailed particle-in-cell simulations with the experiment play an important role in optimizing the accelerator performance and keep pace with the accelerator repetition rate of \textless 1/minute.

Authors

  • Peter Seidl

    LBNL

  • Q. Ji

    LBNL

  • A. Persaud

    LBNL

  • E. Feinberg

    LBNL

  • M. Silverman

    LBNL

  • A. Sulyman

    LBNL

  • W.L. Waldron

    LBNL

  • T. Schenkel

    LBNL

  • J.J. Barnard

    LLNL

  • Alex Friedman

    LLNL, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • David Grote

    LLNL, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • E.P. Gilson

    PPPL

  • I.D. Kaganovich

    PPPL

  • A. Stepanov

    PPPL

  • M. Zimmer

    TU Darmstadt