Publication | Open Access
Implementation of a 1-2 keV point-projection x-ray spectrometer on the National Ignition Facility
12
Citations
9
References
2018
Year
A point-projection soft X-ray Opacity Spectrometer (OpSpec) has been implemented to measure X-ray spectra from ∼1 to 2 keV on the National Ignition Facility (NIF). Measurement of such soft X-rays with open-aperture point-projection detectors is challenging because only very thin filters may be used to shield the detector from the hostile environment. OpSpec diffracts X-rays from 540 to 2100 eV off a potassium (or rubidium) acid phthalate (KAP or RbAP) crystal onto either image plates or, most recently, X-ray films. A "sacrificial front filter" strategy is used to prevent crystal damage, while 2 or 3 rear filters protect the data. Since May 2017, OpSpec has been recording X-ray transmission data for iron-magnesium plasmas on the NIF, at "Anchor 1" plasma conditions (temperature ∼150 eV, density ∼7 × 10<sup>21</sup> <i>e</i> <sup>-</sup>/cm<sup>3</sup>). Upgrades improved OpSpec's performance on 6 NIF shots in August and December 2017, with reduced backgrounds and 100% data return using filter stacks as thin as 2.9 <i>μ</i>m (total). Photometric noise is beginning to meet requirements, and further work will reduce systematic errors.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1