Title :
Numerical simulation of electric explosions of metal wires
Author :
Oreshkin, V.I. ; Baksht, R.B. ; Labetsky, A.Yu. ; Ratakhin, N.A. ; Rousskikh, A.G. ; Shishlov, A.V. ; Levashov, P.R. ; Khishchenko, K.V. ; Glazyrin, I.V. ; Beilis, I.
Author_Institution :
High Current Electron. Inst., Acad. of Sci., Tomsk, Russia
Abstract :
Summary form only given. The successful application of z-pinches as high-power X-ray sources has aroused interest in the study of electric explosion of wires, particularly in vacuum. A large body of experimental data suggests that the explosion of a wire in vacuum is accompanied by the formation of strata and low-density plasma corona surrounding a dense core. It seems likely that early in the explosion this low-density corona consists of a gaseous matter, which is initially sorbed by the wire surface, while later in the process it is formed by metal vapors. We have already simulated the explosion of wires in a liquid dielectric with the use of a 1D magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) code based on the Lagrangian approach, and the results obtained have shown a good agreement with experimental data. However, with this code it is fundamentally difficult to simulate the explosion of wires in vacuum, since the MHD equations are approximated on a grid associated with the mass coordinates of the fluid, thus making impossible a correct simulation of the processes involving very large density differences. In case of the electric explosions of wires in vacuum, the density of a liquid metal is several orders of magnitude higher than that of vapors surrounding it. Therefore, it would appear more reasonable to simulate the process by the particle-in-cell method (the PIC method), where the particles moving on a fixed computational grid (Eulerian grid) are taken to be Lagrangian components.
Keywords :
Z pinch; corona; exploding wires; explosions; plasma X-ray sources; plasma magnetohydrodynamics; plasma simulation; vacuum breakdown; 1D magnetohydrodynamic code; Eulerian grid; Lagrangian approach; Lagrangian components; MHD; computational grid; dense core; electric explosions; gaseous matter; high-power X-ray sources; liquid dielectrics; low-density plasma corona; mass coordinates; metal wires; numerical simulation; particle-in-cell method; sorption; strata formation; vacuum explosion; z-pinches; Corona; Dielectric liquids; Explosions; Lagrangian functions; Magnetohydrodynamics; Numerical simulation; Plasma applications; Plasma density; Plasma simulation; Wires;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 2004. ICOPS 2004. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts. The 31st IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Baltimore, MD, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8334-6
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2004.1339763