84 research outputs found
Efficient laser-driven proton acceleration in the ultra-short pulse regime
The work described in this thesis is concerned with the experimental investigation of the acceleration of high energy proton pulses generated by relativistic laser-plasma interaction and their application. Using the high intensity 150 TW Ti:sapphire based ultra-short pulse laser Draco, a laser-driven proton source was set up and characterized. Conducting experiments on the basis of the established target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA) process, proton energies of up to 20 MeV were obtained. The reliable performance of the proton source was demonstrated in the first direct and dose controlled comparison of the radiobiological effectiveness of intense proton pulses with that of conventionally generated continuous proton beams for the irradiation of in vitro tumour cells. As potential application radiation therapy calls for proton energies exceeding 200 MeV. Therefore the scaling of the maximum proton energy with laser power was investigated and observed to be near-linear for the case of ultra-short laser pulses. This result is attributed to the efficient predominantly quasi-static acceleration in the short acceleration period close to the target rear surface. This assumption is furthermore confirmed by the observation of prominent non-target-normal emission of energetic protons reflecting an asymmetry in the field distribution of promptly accelerated electrons generated by using oblique laser incidence or angularly chirped laser pulses. Supported by numerical simulations, this novel diagnostic reveals the relevance of the initial prethermal phase of the acceleration process preceding the thermal plasma sheath expansion of TNSA. During the plasma expansion phase, the efficiency of the proton acceleration can be improved using so called reduced mass targets (RMT). By confining the lateral target size which avoids the dilution of the expanding sheath and thus increases the strength of the accelerating sheath fields a significant increase of the proton energy and the proton yield was observed
Spectral Control via Multi-Species Effects in PW-Class Laser-Ion Acceleration
Laser-ion acceleration with ultra-short pulse, PW-class lasers is dominated
by non-thermal, intra-pulse plasma dynamics. The presence of multiple ion
species or multiple charge states in targets leads to characteristic
modulations and even mono-energetic features, depending on the choice of target
material. As spectral signatures of generated ion beams are frequently used to
characterize underlying acceleration mechanisms, thermal, multi-fluid
descriptions require a revision for predictive capabilities and control in
next-generation particle beam sources. We present an analytical model with
explicit inter-species interactions, supported by extensive ab initio
simulations. This enables us to derive important ensemble properties from the
spectral distribution resulting from those multi-species effects for arbitrary
mixtures. We further propose a potential experimental implementation with a
novel cryogenic target, delivering jets with variable mixtures of hydrogen and
deuterium. Free from contaminants and without strong influence of hardly
controllable processes such as ionization dynamics, this would allow a
systematic realization of our predictions for the multi-species effect.Comment: 4 pages plus appendix, 11 figures, paper submitted to a journal of
the American Physical Societ
Dynamic convergent shock compression initiated by return current in high-intensity laser solid interactions
We investigate the dynamics of convergent shock compression in the solid wire
targets irradiated by an ultra-fast relativistic laser pulse. Our
Particle-in-Cell (PIC) simulations and coupled hydrodynamic simulations reveal
that the compression process is initiated by both magnetic pressure and surface
ablation associated with a strong transient surface return current with the
density in the order of 1e17 A/m^2 and a lifetime of 100 fs. The results show
that the dominant compression mechanism is governed by the plasma ,
i.e., the ratio of the thermal pressure to magnetic pressure. For small radii
and low atomic number Z wire targets, the magnetic pressure is the dominant
shock compression mechanism. As the target radius and atomic number Z increase,
the surface ablation pressure is the main mechanism to generate convergent
shocks based on the scaling law. Furthermore, the indirect experimental
indication of the shocked hydrogen compression is provided by measuring the
evolution of plasma expansion diameter via optical shadowgraphy. This work
could offer a novel platform to generate extremely high pressures exceeding
Gbar to study high-pressure physics using femtosecond J-level laser pulses,
offering an alternative to the nanosecond kJ laser pulse-initiated and pulse
power Z-pinch compression methods
Time-resolved optical shadowgraphy of solid hydrogen jets as a testbed to benchmark particle-in-cell simulations
Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations are a superior tool to model
kinetics-dominated plasmas in relativistic and ultrarelativistic laser-solid
interactions (dimensionless vectorpotential ). The transition from
relativistic to subrelativistic laser intensities (), where
correlated and collisional plasma physics become relevant, is reaching the
limits of available modeling capabilities. This calls for theoretical and
experimental benchmarks and the establishment of standardized testbeds. In this
work, we develop such a suitable testbed to experimentally benchmark PIC
simulations using a laser-irradiated micron-sized cryogenic hydrogen-jet
target. Time-resolved optical shadowgraphy of the expanding plasma density,
complemented by hydrodynamics and ray-tracing simulations, is used to determine
the bulk-electron temperature evolution after laser irradiation. As a showcase,
a study of isochoric heating of solid hydrogen induced by laser pulses with a
dimensionless vectorpotential of is presented. The comparison
of the bulk-electron temperature of the experiment with systematic scans of PIC
simulations demostrates that, due to an interplay of vacuum heating and
resonance heating of electrons, the initial surface-density gradient of the
target is decisive to reach quantitative agreement at \SI{1}{\ps} after the
interaction. The showcase demostrates the readiness of the testbed for
controlled parameter scans at all laser intensities of
Efficient laser-driven proton acceleration from cylindrical and planar cryogenic hydrogen jets.
We report on recent experimental results deploying a continuous cryogenic hydrogen jet as a debris-free, renewable laser-driven source of pure proton beams generated at the 150 TW ultrashort pulse laser Draco. Efficient proton acceleration reaching cut-off energies of up to 20 MeV with particle numbers exceeding 109 particles per MeV per steradian is demonstrated, showing for the first time that the acceleration performance is comparable to solid foil targets with thicknesses in the micrometer range. Two different target geometries are presented and their proton beam deliverance characterized: cylindrical (∅ 5 μm) and planar (20 μm × 2 μm). In both cases typical Target Normal Sheath Acceleration emission patterns with exponential proton energy spectra are detected. Significantly higher proton numbers in laser-forward direction are observed when deploying the planar jet as compared to the cylindrical jet case. This is confirmed by two-dimensional Particle-in-Cell (2D3V PIC) simulations, which demonstrate that the planar jet proves favorable as its geometry leads to more optimized acceleration conditions
I-BEAT: New ultrasonic method for single bunch measurement of ion energy distribution
The shape of a wave carries all information about the spatial and temporal
structure of its source, given that the medium and its properties are known.
Most modern imaging methods seek to utilize this nature of waves originating
from Huygens' principle. We discuss the retrieval of the complete kinetic
energy distribution from the acoustic trace that is recorded when a short ion
bunch deposits its energy in water. This novel method, which we refer to as
Ion-Bunch Energy Acoustic Tracing (I-BEAT), is a generalization of the
ionoacoustic approach. Featuring compactness, simple operation,
indestructibility and high dynamic ranges in energy and intensity, I-BEAT is a
promising approach to meet the needs of petawatt-class laser-based ion
accelerators. With its capability of completely monitoring a single, focused
proton bunch with prompt readout it, is expected to have particular impact for
experiments and applications using ultrashort ion bunches in high flux regimes.
We demonstrate its functionality using it with two laser-driven ion sources for
quantitative determination of the kinetic energy distribution of single,
focused proton bunches.Comment: Paper: 17 Pages, 3 figures Supplementary Material 16 pages, 7 figure
Spectral and spatial shaping of laser-driven proton beams using a pulsed high-field magnet beamline
Intense laser-driven proton pulses, inherently broadband and highly
divergent, pose a challenge to established beamline concepts on the path to
application-adapted irradiation field formation, particularly for 3D. Here we
experimentally show the successful implementation of a highly efficient (50%
transmission) and tuneable dual pulsed solenoid setup to generate a homogeneous
(8.5% uniformity laterally and in depth) volumetric dose distribution
(cylindrical volume of 5 mm diameter and depth) at a single pulse dose of 0.7
Gy via multi-energy slice selection from the broad input spectrum. The
experiments have been conducted at the Petawatt beam of the Dresden Laser
Acceleration Source Draco and were aided by a predictive simulation model
verified by proton transport studies. With the characterised beamline we
investigated manipulation and matching of lateral and depth dose profiles to
various desired applications and targets. Using a specifically adapted dose
profile, we successfully performed first proof-of-concept laser-driven proton
irradiation studies of volumetric in-vivo normal tissue (zebrafish embryos) and
in-vitro tumour tissue (SAS spheroids) samples.Comment: Submitted to Scientific Report
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