Title :
Plasma formation and evolution on a copper surface driven by megaampere current pulse
Author :
Yates, K.C. ; Bauer, B.S. ; Fuelling, S. ; Ivanov, V.V. ; Altemara, S.D. ; Papp, Daniel ; Anderson, A.A. ; Wurden, G.A. ; Awe, T.J. ; Bauer, R.S.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given. Copper and aluminum mm-diameter rods have been driven by a mega-ampere current pulse at UNR´s Nevada Terawatt Facility. The facility´s z-pinch delivers 1 M A in ~100 ns producing megagauss surface magnetic fields that diffuse into the skin layer, ohmically heating the load and causing plasma formation. The load radius is designed such that it is in the “thick wire” regime; the radius is much thicker than the skin depth. With the novel “barbell” design of our loads, plasma formation due to arcing or electron avalanche is avoided, allowing for the study of ohmically heated loads. Work presented here will show first evidence of a magnetic field threshold for plasma formation in copper and compare with previous work done with aluminum1. Similarities and differences between these metals will be presented, giving motivation for continued work with different material loads. During the current rise, the metal is heated to temperatures that cause multiple phase changes. When the surface magnetic field reaches a threshold, the metal ionizes and the plasma becomes pinched against the underlying cold liquid metal. Diagnostics fielded include visible light radiometry, two-frame shadowgraphy in both 266 and 532 nm wavelengths, 266 nm interferometry, time gated EUV spectroscopy, 12-frame/5 ns gated imaging, and single frame/2 ns gated imaging with an ICCD camera. Surface temperature, expansion speeds, instability growth, time of plasma formation and plasma uniformity are determined from the data. The interplay between an ohmically heated conductor and a magnetic field is important for the field of Magnetized Target Fusion (MTF). MTF compresses a magnetized fuel by imploding a flux conserving metal liner. During compression, fields reach several megagauss, with a fraction of the flux diffusing into the metal liner. The magnetic field induces eddy currents in the metal, leading to ionization and potential mixing - f metal contaminant into the fusion fuel.
Keywords :
Z pinch; copper; ionisation; liquid metals; plasma diagnostics; plasma instability; plasma magnetohydrodynamics; plasma ohmic heating; plasma temperature; plasma transport processes; 12-frame/5 ns gated imaging; Cu; ICCD camera; barbell design; cold liquid metal; copper surface; electron avalanche; expansion speeds; instability growth; ionisation; magnetic field threshold; magnetized fuel; magnetized target fusion; mega-ampere current pulse; megagauss surface magnetic fields; ohmic heating; plasma formation time; single frame/2 ns gated imaging; surface magnetic field; surface temperature; thick wire regime; time gated EUV spectroscopy; two-frame shadowgraphy; visible light radiometry; wavelength 266 nm; wavelength 532 nm; z-pinch; Copper; Heating; Laboratories; Logic gates; Magnetic fields; Plasmas;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science (ICOPS), 2013 Abstracts IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.2013.6633214