Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Oct 2018)

Collisionless shock acceleration of narrow energy spread ion beams from mixed species plasmas using 1  μm lasers

  • A. Pak,
  • S. Kerr,
  • N. Lemos,
  • A. Link,
  • P. Patel,
  • F. Albert,
  • L. Divol,
  • B. B. Pollock,
  • D. Haberberger,
  • D. Froula,
  • M. Gauthier,
  • S. H. Glenzer,
  • A. Longman,
  • L. Manzoor,
  • R. Fedosejevs,
  • S. Tochitsky,
  • C. Joshi,
  • F. Fiuza

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.21.103401
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 10
p. 103401

Abstract

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Collisionless shock acceleration of protons and C^{6+} ions has been achieved by the interaction of a 10^{20} W/cm^{2}, 1 μm laser with a near-critical density plasma. Ablation of the initially solid density target by a secondary laser allows for systematic control of the plasma profile. This enables the production of beams with peaked spectra with energies of 10–18 MeV/amu and energy spreads of 10%–20% with up to 3×10^{9} particles within these narrow spectral features. The narrow energy spread and similar velocity of ion species with different charge-to-mass ratios are consistent with acceleration by the moving potential of a shock wave. Particle-in-cell simulations show shock accelerated beams of protons and C^{6+} ions with energy distributions consistent with the experiments. Simulations further indicate the plasma profile determines the trade-off between the beam charge and energy and that with additional target optimization narrow energy spread beams exceeding 100 MeV/amu can be produced using the same laser conditions.