Design of a 7-MV Linear Transformer Driver (LTD) for down-hole flash x-ray radiography.
Author(s) -
S. Cordova,
D. R. Welch,
B. V. Oliver,
D. V. Rose,
David L. Johnson,
N. Bruner,
Joshua J. Leckbee
Publication year - 2008
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/940903
Subject(s) - diode , flash (photography) , linear particle accelerator , transformer , pulsed power , electrical impedance , voltage , pinch , high voltage , electrical engineering , physics , cathode ray , particle accelerator , materials science , optics , beam (structure) , optoelectronics , electron , engineering , nuclear physics
Pulsed power driven flash x-ray radiography is a valuable diagnostic for subcritical experiments at the Nevada Test Site. The existing dual-axis Cygnus system produces images using a 2.25 MV electron beam diode to produce intense x-rays from a small source. Future hydrodynamic experiments will likely use objects with higher areal mass, requiring increased x-ray dose and higher voltages while maintaining small source spot size. A linear transformer driver (LTD) is a compact pulsed power technology with applications ranging from pulsed power flash x-ray radiography to high current Z-pinch accelerators. This report describes the design of a 7-MV dual-axis system that occupies the same lab space as the Cygnus accelerators. The work builds on a design proposed in a previous report [1]. This new design provides increased diode voltage from a lower impedance accelerator to improve coupling to low impedance diodes such as the self magnetic pinch (SMP) diode. The design also improves the predicted reliability by operating at a lower charge voltage and removing components that have proven vulnerable to failure. Simulations of the new design and experimental results of the 1-MV prototype are presented
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