Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Jan 2010)

Three-dimensional electromagnetic model of the pulsed-power Z-pinch accelerator

  • D. V. Rose,
  • D. R. Welch,
  • E. A. Madrid,
  • C. L. Miller,
  • R. E. Clark,
  • W. A. Stygar,
  • M. E. Savage,
  • G. A. Rochau,
  • J. E. Bailey,
  • T. J. Nash,
  • M. E. Sceiford,
  • K. W. Struve,
  • P. A. Corcoran,
  • B. A. Whitney

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.13.010402
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
p. 010402

Abstract

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A three-dimensional, fully electromagnetic model of the principal pulsed-power components of the 26-MA ZR accelerator [D. H. McDaniel et al., in Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Dense Z-Pinches (AIP, New York, 2002), p. 23] has been developed. This large-scale simulation model tracks the evolution of electromagnetic waves through the accelerator’s intermediate-storage capacitors, laser-triggered gas switches, pulse-forming lines, water switches, triplate transmission lines, and water convolute to the vacuum insulator stack. The insulator-stack electrodes are coupled to a transmission-line circuit model of the four-level magnetically insulated vacuum-transmission-line section and double-post-hole convolute. The vacuum-section circuit model is terminated by a one-dimensional self-consistent dynamic model of an imploding z-pinch load. The simulation results are compared with electrical measurements made throughout the ZR accelerator, and are in good agreement with the data, especially for times until peak load power. This modeling effort demonstrates that 3D electromagnetic models of large-scale, multiple-module, pulsed-power accelerators are now computationally tractable. This, in turn, presents new opportunities for simulating the operation of existing pulsed-power systems used in a variety of high-energy-density-physics and radiographic applications, as well as even higher-power next-generation accelerators before they are constructed.