• DocumentCode
    3201691
  • Title

    Numerical simulations of thick aluminum wire behavior under megaampere current drive

  • Author

    Garanin, S.F. ; Kuznetsov, S.D. ; Atchison, W.L. ; Reinovsky, R.E. ; Awe, T.J. ; Bauer, B.S. ; Fuelling, S. ; Lindemuth, I.R. ; Siemon, R.E.

  • Author_Institution
    All-Russian Res. Inst. of Exp. Phys. (VNIIEF), Sarov, Russia
  • fYear
    2009
  • fDate
    June 28 2009-July 2 2009
  • Firstpage
    101
  • Lastpage
    106
  • Abstract
    A series of experiments to study the behavior of thick wires (0.5 mm to 2 mm in diameter) driven by currents of about 1 MA have recently been conducted on the Zebra facility at the University of Nevada, Reno. The objective of these experiments was to study plasma formation on the surface of conductors under the impact of megagauss magnetic fields. Laser shadowgraphy, filtered optical and extreme ultraviolet photodiodes, and extreme ultraviolet spectroscopy used in the experiments provided data on radial expansion of wires and plasma radiation. This paper focuses on numerical simulations of these experiments. Simulations with wires having a diameter of 1.6 mm and less demonstrated plasma formation with temperatures above 3 eV, which is in preliminary agreement with the experiment. For 2 mm diameter wires, although plasma can be observed in the simulations, it has substantially smaller optical thickness than in the simulations of the smaller-diameter wires, and the radiation fluxes prove to be much lower. This can shed light on the experimental results, where the radiation of the 2 mm wires was very weak. The simulated time dependences of the wire radii agree rather well with the experimental results obtained using laser diagnostics and light imaging. The experimental data of the photodiodes also agree well with the simulated time dependence of the detected radiation.
  • Keywords
    magnetic fields; numerical analysis; radiation detection; ultraviolet spectroscopy; wires (electric); Laser shadowgraphy; Reno; University of Nevada; Zebra facility; aluminum wire behavior; conductors surface; current 1 MA; filtered optical photodiodes; laser diagnostics; light imaging; mega-ampere current drive; megagauss magnetic fields; numerical simulations; plasma formation; plasma radiation; radiation flux; ultraviolet photodiodes; ultraviolet spectroscopy; Aluminum; Conductors; Magnetic fields; Numerical simulation; Optical filters; Photodiodes; Plasma simulation; Plasma temperature; Ultraviolet sources; Wire;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Pulsed Power Conference, 2009. PPC '09. IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Washington, DC
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-4064-1
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4244-4065-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/PPC.2009.5386185
  • Filename
    5386185