A diamond detector for X-ray bang-time measurement at the National Ignition Facility

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Published 15 February 2011 Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation A G MacPhee et al 2011 JINST 6 P02009 DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/6/02/P02009

1748-0221/6/02/P02009

Abstract

An instrument has been developed to measure X-ray bang-time for inertial confinement fusion capsules; the time interval between the start of the laser pulse and peak X-ray emission from the fuel core. The instrument comprises chemical vapor deposited polycrystalline diamond photoconductive X-ray detectors with highly ordered pyrolytic graphite X-ray monochromator crystals at the input. Capsule bang-time can be measured in the presence of relatively high thermal and hard X-ray background components due to the selective band pass of the crystals combined with direct and indirect X-ray shielding of the detector elements. A five channel system is being commissioned at the National Ignition Facility at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory for implosion optimization measurements as part of the National Ignition Campaign. Characteristics of the instrument have been measured demonstrating that X-ray bang-time can be measured with ±30 ps precision, characterizing the soft X-ray drive to +/- 1 eV or 1.5%.

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10.1088/1748-0221/6/02/P02009