• Laser and Particle Beams
  • Vol. 2022, Issue 4, 2404263 (2022)
Marius S. Schollmeier1, Vahe Shirvanyan1, Christie Capper1, Sven Steinke1, Adam Higginson2, Reed Hollinger2, John T. Morrison2, Ryan Nedbailo2, Huanyu Song2, Shoujun Wang2, Jorge J. Rocca2、3, Georg Korn1, and Dimitri Batani
Author Affiliations
  • 1Marvel Fusion GmbH Munich 80339 Germany
  • 2Electrical and Computer Engineering Department Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado 80523 USA
  • 3Physics Department Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado 80523 USA
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    DOI: 10.1155/2022/2404263 Cite this Article
    Marius S. Schollmeier, Vahe Shirvanyan, Christie Capper, Sven Steinke, Adam Higginson, Reed Hollinger, John T. Morrison, Ryan Nedbailo, Huanyu Song, Shoujun Wang, Jorge J. Rocca, Georg Korn, Dimitri Batani. Investigation of Proton Beam-Driven Fusion Reactions Generated by an Ultra-Short Petawatt-Scale Laser Pulse[J]. Laser and Particle Beams, 2022, 2022(4): 2404263 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    We present results from a pitcher-catcher experiment utilizing a proton beam generated with nanostructured targets at a petawatt-class, short-pulse laser facility to induce proton-boron fusion reactions in a secondary target. A 45-fs laser pulse with either 400 nm wavelength and 7 J energy, or 800 nm and 14 J, and an intensity of up to 5 × 1021 W/cm2 was used to irradiate either thin foil targets or near-solid density, nanostructured targets made of boron nitride (BN) nanotubes. In particular, for 800 nm wavelength irradiation, a BN nanotube target created a proton beam with about five times higher maximum energy and about ten times more protons than a foil target. This proton beam was used to irradiate a thick plate made of boron nitride placed in close proximity to trigger 11B (p, α) 2α fusion reactions. A suite of diagnostics consisting of Thomson parabola ion spectrometers, postshot nuclear activation measurements, neutron time-of-flight detectors, and differentially filtered solid-state nuclear track detectors were used to measure both the primary proton spectrum and the fusion products. From the primary proton spectrum, we calculated (p, n) and (α,n) reactions in the catcher and compare with our measurements. The nuclear activation results agree quantitatively and neutron signals agree qualitatively with the calculations, giving confidence that primary particle distributions can be obtained from such measurements. These results provide new insights for measuring the ion distributions inside of proton-boron fusion targets.
    Marius S. Schollmeier, Vahe Shirvanyan, Christie Capper, Sven Steinke, Adam Higginson, Reed Hollinger, John T. Morrison, Ryan Nedbailo, Huanyu Song, Shoujun Wang, Jorge J. Rocca, Georg Korn, Dimitri Batani. Investigation of Proton Beam-Driven Fusion Reactions Generated by an Ultra-Short Petawatt-Scale Laser Pulse[J]. Laser and Particle Beams, 2022, 2022(4): 2404263
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