Title: Update on Various Target Issues
1Update on Various Target Issues
- Presented by Ron Petzoldt
- D. Goodin, E. Valmianski, N. Alexander, J. Hoffer
- Livermore HAPL meeting
- June 20-21, 2005
2Accomplishments
- We demonstrated improved tracking with 1st
generation system - Evaluated impurity effects on target reflectivity
- Modeled the impact of foam shell
non-concentricity on DT ice non-concentricity - Calculated time limits for handoff of layered
targets to an injector - Completed cryogenic coil resistance testing
3- Improved tracking
4The Gen-I system is tracking targets full
length for position prediction calculations
- Improved laser beam collimation reduced
cross-talk between horizontal and vertical
position measurements
25 mm
Target height
Laser
0 mm
D2 measurements taken in two horizontal positions
20 mm apart
5Target position prediction improved from 2.0 mm
to 0.49 mm (1 ?)
Gun
D1 (4.1 m)
D2 (8.7 m)
DCC (17.7 m)
Air rifle shots
Air rifle shots
Shots from October 2004
Shots from 3 June 2005
- Measured position in flight at two stations,
predicted position at DCC, measured position at
DCC, and compared measurement/prediction - Gen-II tracking system is under evaluation
(Graham Flint talk)
6- Impurity effects on target reflectivity
- Impurities in DT supply
- Transfer to the layering system
- Impurities in the cryogenic fluidized bed
- Transfer to the injector
7Impurity gases can freeze on target surface and
reduce target reflectivity
- This could increase in-chamber target heating
-
- lt1 ?m of air deposit is required for target
reflectivity (water thickness must be even less) -
8Deposits during cool down in permeation cell are
small
- Example Assume 99.999 pure DT in permeation
cell with 600 ?m DT layer with equal DT outside a
2.4 mm radius target -
9Maximum deposition rate at 10-6 Torr and 20 K is
40 nm/min
- Example N2 at 10-6 Torr 1.3?10-4 Pa
-
- This would mean 1 micron buildup would occur in
25 minutes - Thus ltlt 10-6 Torr is needed for the transfer to
fluidized bed
10Transferring targets in cryogenic vacuum should
prevent significant cryo-deposits
- Cryogenic chamber in vacuum keeps vapor pressure
low
11Most gases have extremely low vapor pressure in a
cryogenic environment
Approximate vapor pressure in Torr
- Design concepts allow ltlt 10-6 Torr and negligible
impurity buildup - Similar - negligible buildup in fluidized bed
loop or in transfer to the injector -
12- Impact of foam shell non-concentricity on DT ice
non-concentricity
13Calculated total DT layer thickness is
insensitive to foam non-concentricity (1)
- We calculated DT temperature difference by
initially assuming uniform DT layer thickness
inside a non-concentric foam with a uniform outer
surface temperature -
DT
T1
T2
DT/foam
- ks Thermal conductivity of foam solid 0.065
W/m?K - kDT Thermal conductivity of solid DT 0.29
W/m?K - Volume fraction DT 90
14Calculated total DT layer thickness is
insensitive to foam non-concentricity (2)
- We then found the shift in inner DT center that
leads to a uniform inner DT temperature
(equilibrium)
DT
T1
T2
DT/foam
- Thus the total variation in ice thickness is
estimated to be more than an order of magnitude
less than the variation in the foam thickness -
15Thermal conductivity model needs verification for
solid DT in foam
- Model has been tested for liquid DT in foam
- Smaller crystals and possible void spaces in foam
may cause reduced thermal conductivity - LLE plans to measure thermal conductivity of D2
in foam - Results are insensitive to small changes in
conductivity -
16Layer thickness in a layering sphere was less
sensitive to DT/foam conductivity
With this assumption, the DT offset is still
nearly an order of magnitude less than the foam
offset
17- Time limits for handoff
- of layered targets to an injector
18We investigated layer degradation after target
removal from fluidized bed
- A long layering time constant slows layer
movement in a non-uniform temperature environment -
- Low dnsv/dT for DT and high He-3 build up time
(t) increase beta layering time constant -
19Layering time constant increases with decreased
temperature
Assumes baseline NRL target and 1 day He-3
buildup
- Long layering time constant increases layer
survival time in a temperature gradient
20Time to change layer uniformity depends on ?T and
T
18 s at 16 K and 100 mK across target
- Example time available to transfer target is lt
18 s - Lower temperature would greatly increase time
21- Cryogenic coil resistance testing
22Coil resistance dropped substantially when
annealed
- Recall L/Rgtgt25 ms is required to sustain coil
current in an attractive force EM accelerator - Previous results showed increased conductivity
with welded annealed coil than soldered and not
annealed - New testing shows annealing is the major
contributor
Fr
Fz
Fr
Accelerating Coil
Sabot Coil
- L/R at 15 K and 0.9 Tesla annealed is 80 ms
23Composition variations between lots significantly
affect coil resistance
- Much higher low-temperature resistance!
- Coil purity must be controlled to achieve
consistent results
24Summary
- External tracking position prediction accuracy
improved by a factor of 4 - Impurity buildup on targets must be controlled
- Model indicates that total DT layer thickness is
relatively insensitive to target foam
non-concentricity - Experimental measurement of conductivity needed
- Low target temperature greatly increases DT layer
shift time in temperature gradient - Sufficient time is available for target transfer
with low ?T - Coil resistance was improved by annealing but
varied with lot number on 5N Al wire