Publication | Open Access
Selective deuterium ion acceleration using the Vulcan petawatt laser
20
Citations
30
References
2015
Year
Vulcan Petawatt LaserNuclear PhysicsPhysicsEngineeringLaser Plasma PhysicsNatural SciencesConversion EfficiencyApplied PhysicsLaser ApplicationsInertial Confinement FusionSelective AccelerationDeuterium IonsLaser-plasma InteractionIon Beam InstrumentationHigh-energy LasersIon BeamLaser Plasma PhysicHigh-power Lasers
We report on the successful demonstration of selective acceleration of deuterium ions by target-normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) with a high-energy petawatt laser. TNSA typically produces a multi-species ion beam that originates from the intrinsic hydrocarbon and water vapor contaminants on the target surface. Using the method first developed by Morrison et al. [Phys. Plasmas 19, 030707 (2012)], an ion beam with >99% deuterium ions and peak energy 14 MeV/nucleon is produced with a 200 J, 700 fs, >1020W/cm2 laser pulse by cryogenically freezing heavy water (D2O) vapor onto the rear surface of the target prior to the shot. Within the range of our detectors (0°–8.5°), we find laser-to-deuterium-ion energy conversion efficiency of 4.3% above 0.7 MeV/nucleon while a conservative estimate of the total beam gives a conversion efficiency of 9.4%.
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