An accelerator facility for WDM, HEDP, and HIF investigations in Nazarbayev University

Bibliographic Details
Parent link:Journal of Physics: Conference Series
Vol. 717 : Inertial Fusion Sciences and Applications (IFSA 2015).— 2016.— [012099, 5 p.]
Corporate Author: Национальный исследовательский Томский политехнический университет
Other Authors: Kaykanov M. I. Marat Islambekovich, Baigarin K. Kanat, Tikhonov A. A. Aleksandr Aleksandrovich, Urazbaev A. Arshat, Kwan J. Joe, Henestroza E. Enrique, Remnev G. E. Gennady Efimovich, Shubin B. G. Boris Grigorievich, Stepanov A. V. Andrey Vladimirovich, Shamanin V. I. Vitaly Igorevich, Waldron W. L. William L.
Summary:Title screen
Nazarbayev University (NU) in Astana, Kazakhstan, is planning to build a new multi-MV, ~10 to several hundred GW/cm2 ion accelerator facility which will be used in studies of material properties at extreme conditions relevant to ion-beam-driven inertial fusion energy, and other applications. Two design options have been considered. The first option is a 1.2 MV induction linac similar to the NDCX-II at LBNL, but with modifications, capable of heating a 1 mm spot size thin targets to a few eV temperature. The second option is a 2 - 3 MV, ~200 kA, single-gap-diode proton accelerator powered by an inductive voltage adder. The high current proton beam can be focused to ~1 cm spot size to obtain power densities of several hundred GW/cm2, capable of heating thick targets to temperatures of tens of eV. In both cases, a common requirement to achieving high beam intensity on target and pulse length compression is to utilize beam neutralization at the final stage of beam focusing. Initial experiments on pulsed ion beam neutralization have been carried out on a 0.3 MV, 1.5 GW single-gap ion accelerator at Tomsk Polytechnic University with the goal of creating a plasma region in front of a target at densities exceeding ~1012 cm-3.
Language:English
Published: 2016
Series:Lasers, Particle Beams, Fusion Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/717/1/012099
http://earchive.tpu.ru/handle/11683/33619
Format: Electronic Book Chapter
KOHA link:https://koha.lib.tpu.ru/cgi-bin/koha/opac-detail.pl?biblionumber=650756

MARC

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330 |a Nazarbayev University (NU) in Astana, Kazakhstan, is planning to build a new multi-MV, ~10 to several hundred GW/cm2 ion accelerator facility which will be used in studies of material properties at extreme conditions relevant to ion-beam-driven inertial fusion energy, and other applications. Two design options have been considered. The first option is a 1.2 MV induction linac similar to the NDCX-II at LBNL, but with modifications, capable of heating a 1 mm spot size thin targets to a few eV temperature. The second option is a 2 - 3 MV, ~200 kA, single-gap-diode proton accelerator powered by an inductive voltage adder. The high current proton beam can be focused to ~1 cm spot size to obtain power densities of several hundred GW/cm2, capable of heating thick targets to temperatures of tens of eV. In both cases, a common requirement to achieving high beam intensity on target and pulse length compression is to utilize beam neutralization at the final stage of beam focusing. Initial experiments on pulsed ion beam neutralization have been carried out on a 0.3 MV, 1.5 GW single-gap ion accelerator at Tomsk Polytechnic University with the goal of creating a plasma region in front of a target at densities exceeding ~1012 cm-3. 
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701 1 |a Tikhonov  |b A. A.  |g Aleksandr Aleksandrovich 
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701 1 |a Kwan  |b J.  |g Joe 
701 1 |a Henestroza  |b E.  |g Enrique 
701 1 |a Remnev  |b G. E.  |c physicist  |c Professor of Tomsk Polytechnic University, Doctor of technical sciences  |f 1948-  |g Gennady Efimovich  |3 (RuTPU)RU\TPU\pers\31500 
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701 1 |a Waldron  |b W. L.  |g William L. 
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