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Dive into the research topics where Alvin C. Erlandson is active.

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Featured researches published by Alvin C. Erlandson.


Applied Optics | 2010

Demonstration of a 1.1 petawatt laser based on a hybrid optical parametric chirped pulse amplification/mixed Nd:glass amplifier

E. Gaul; Mikael Martinez; Joel Blakeney; Axel Jochmann; Martin Ringuette; Doug Hammond; Ted Borger; Ramiro Escamilla; Skylar Douglas; Watson Henderson; G. Dyer; Alvin C. Erlandson; R.R. Cross; John A. Caird; Christopher A. Ebbers; T. Ditmire

We present the design and performance of the Texas Petawatt Laser, which produces a 186 J 167 fs pulse based on the combination of optical parametric chirped pulse amplification (OPCPA) and mixed Nd:glass amplification. OPCPA provides the majority of the gain and is used to broaden and shape the seed spectrum, while amplification in Nd:glass accounts for >99% of the final pulse energy. Compression is achieved with highly efficient multilayer dielectric gratings.


Nuclear Fusion | 2004

An overview of LLNL high-energy short-pulse technology for advanced radiography of laser fusion experiments

C. P. J. Barty; M.H. Key; J.A. Britten; R. Beach; G. Beer; C. Brown; S. Bryan; John A. Caird; T. Carlson; John K. Crane; Jay W. Dawson; Alvin C. Erlandson; D. N. Fittinghoff; Mark Hermann; C. Hoaglan; A. Iyer; L. Jones; Igor Jovanovic; Aleksey M. Komashko; O. L. Landen; Zhi M. Liao; William A. Molander; S. Mitchell; E. I. Moses; Norman D. Nielsen; H.-H. Nguyen; J. Nissen; Stephen A. Payne; Deanna M. Pennington; L. Risinger

The technical challenges and motivations for high-energy, short-pulse generation with the National Ignition Facility (NIF) and possibly other large-scale Nd : glass lasers are reviewed. High-energy short-pulse generation (multi-kilojoule, picosecond pulses) will be possible via the adaptation of chirped pulse amplification laser techniques on NIF. Development of metre-scale, high-efficiency, high-damage-threshold final optics is a key technical challenge. In addition, deployment of high energy petawatt (HEPW) pulses on NIF is constrained by existing laser infrastructure and requires new, compact compressor designs and short-pulse, fibre-based, seed-laser systems. The key motivations for HEPW pulses on NIF is briefly outlined and includes high-energy, x-ray radiography, proton beam radiography, proton isochoric heating and tests of the fast ignitor concept for inertial confinement fusion.


Applied Optics | 2005

Z-Beamlet: a multikilojoule, terawatt-class laser system

Patrick K. Rambo; I. C. Smith; John L. Porter; Michael James Hurst; C. Shane Speas; R. G. Adams; Antonio J. Garcia; Ellis Dawson; Benjamin D. Thurston; Colleen Wakefield; Jeff W. Kellogg; Michael J. Slattery; H.C. Ives; Robin Scott Broyles; John A. Caird; Alvin C. Erlandson; James E. Murray; William C. Behrendt; Norman D. Neilsen; Joseph M. Narduzzi

A large-aperture (30-cm) kilojoule-class Nd:glass laser system known as Z-Beamlet has been constructed to perform x-ray radiography of high-energy-density science experiments conducted on the Z facility at Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico. The laser, operating with typical pulse durations from 0.3 to 1.5 ns, employs a sequence of successively larger multipass amplifiers to achieve up to 3-kJ energy at 1054 nm. Large-aperture frequency conversion and long-distance beam transport can provide on-target energies of up to 1.5 kJ at 527 nm.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2007

The mercury project : A high average power, gas-cooled laser for inertial fusion energy development

A. Bayramian; P. Armstrong; E. Ault; R. J. Beach; C. Bibeau; John A. Caird; R. Campbell; B. Chai; Jay W. Dawson; Christopher A. Ebbers; Alvin C. Erlandson; Y. Fei; Barry L. Freitas; R. Kent; Z. Liao; Tony Ladran; Joseph A. Menapace; B. Molander; Stephen A. Payne; N. Peterson; M. Randles; Kathleen I. Schaffers; S. Sutton; John B. Tassano; S. Telford; E. Utterback

Abstract Hundred-joule, kilowatt-class lasers based on diode-pumped solid-state technologies, are being developed worldwide for laser-plasma interactions and as prototypes for fusion energy drivers. The goal of the Mercury Laser Project is to develop key technologies within an architectural framework that demonstrates basic building blocks for scaling to larger multi-kilojoule systems for inertial fusion energy (IFE) applications. Mercury has requirements that include: scalability to IFE beamlines, 10 Hz repetition rate, high efficiency, and 109 shot reliability. The Mercury laser has operated continuously for several hours at 55 J and 10 Hz with fourteen 4 × 6 cm2 ytterbium doped strontium fluoroapatite amplifier slabs pumped by eight 100 kW diode arrays. A portion of the output 1047 nm was converted to 523 nm at 160 W average power with 73 % conversion efficiency using yttrium calcium oxy-borate (YCOB).


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 2008

High-average-power femto-petawatt laser pumped by the Mercury laser facility

A. Bayramian; James P. Armstrong; Glenn Beer; R. Campbell; Bruce H. T. Chai; Robert R. Cross; Alvin C. Erlandson; Yting Fei; Barry L. Freitas; Robert Kent; Joseph A. Menapace; William A. Molander; Kathleen I. Schaffers; C. W. Siders; S. Sutton; John B. Tassano; Steve Telford; Christopher A. Ebbers; John A. Caird; C. P. J. Barty

The Mercury laser system is a diode-pumped solid-state laser that has demonstrated over 60 J at a repetition rate of 10 Hz (600 W) of near-infrared light (1047 nm). Using a yttrium calcium oxyborate frequency converter, we have demonstrated 31.7 J/pulse at 10 Hz of second harmonic generation. The frequency converted Mercury laser system will pump a high-average-power Ti:sapphire chirped pulse amplifier system that will produce a compressed peak power > 1 PW and peak irradiance > 1023W/cm2.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2011

Compact, Efficient Laser Systems Required for Laser Inertial Fusion Energy

A. Bayramian; S. Aceves; T. Anklam; K. Baker; E. Bliss; C. Boley; A. Bullington; John A. Caird; D. Chen; R. Deri; Mike Dunne; Alvin C. Erlandson; D. Flowers; Mark A. Henesian; Jeffery F. Latkowski; Kenneth R. Manes; William A. Molander; E. I. Moses; T. Piggott; S. Powers; S. Rana; S. Rodriguez; R. Sawicki; Kathleen I. Schaffers; L. Seppala; M. Spaeth; S. Sutton; S. Telford

Abstract This paper presents our conceptual design for laser drivers used in Laser Inertial Fusion Energy (LIFE) power plants. Although we have used only modest extensions of existing laser technology to ensure near-term feasibility, predicted performance meets or exceeds plant requirements: 2.2 MJ pulse energy produced by 384 beamlines at 16 Hz, with 18% wall-plug efficiency. High reliability and maintainability are achieved by mounting components in compact line-replaceable units that can be removed and replaced rapidly while other beamlines continue to operate, at up to ˜13% above normal energy, to compensate for neighboring beamlines that have failed. Statistical modeling predicts that laser-system availability can be greater than 99% provided that components meet reasonable mean-time-between-failure specifications.


Optical Materials Express | 2011

Comparison of Nd:phosphate glass, Yb:YAG and Yb:S-FAP laser beamlines for laser inertial fusion energy (LIFE) [Invited]

Alvin C. Erlandson; S. Aceves; A. Bayramian; Amber L. Bullington; Raymond J. Beach; C. D. Boley; John A. Caird; Robert J. Deri; A. M. Dunne; D. Flowers; Mark A. Henesian; Kenneth R. Manes; E. I. Moses; S. Rana; Kathleen I. Schaffers; M. Spaeth; C. J. Stolz; S. J. Telford

We present the results of performance modeling of diode-pumped solid state laser beamlines designed for use in Laser Inertial Fusion Energy (LIFE) power plants. Our modeling quantifies the efficiency increases that can be obtained by increasing peak diode power and reducing pump-pulse duration, to reduce decay losses. At the same efficiency, beamlines that use laser slabs of Yb:YAG or Yb:S-FAP require lower diode power than beamlines that use laser slabs of Nd:phosphate glass, since Yb:YAG and Yb:S-FAP have longer storage lifetimes. Beamlines using Yb:YAG attain their highest efficiency at a temperature of about 200K. Beamlines using Nd:phosphate glass or Yb:S-FAP attain high efficiency at or near room temperature.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2009

ND:GLASS LASER DESIGN FOR LASER ICF FISSION ENERGY (LIFE)

John A. Caird; Vivek Agrawal; A. Bayramian; Ray Beach; J.A. Britten; Diana Chen; Robert R. Cross; Christopher A. Ebbers; Alvin C. Erlandson; Michael D. Feit; Barry L. Freitas; Chuni Ghosh; C. Haefner; Doug Homoelle; Tony Ladran; Jeff Latkowski; William A. Molander; J. R. Murray; Sasha Rubenchik; Kathleen I. Schaffers; Craig W. Siders; Eddy A. Stappaerts; S. Sutton; Steve Telford; John B. Trenholme; Christopher Barty

Abstract We have developed preliminary conceptual laser system designs for the Laser ICF (Inertial Confinement Fusion) Fission Energy (LIFE) application. Our approach leverages experience in high-energy Nd: glass laser technology developed for the National Ignition Facility (NIF)1, along with high-energy-class diode-pumped solid-state laser (HEC-DPSSL) technology developed for the DOE’s High Average Power Laser (HAPL) Program and embodied LLNL’s Mercury laser system.2 We present laser system designs suitable for both indirect-drive, hot spot ignition and indirect-drive, fast ignition targets. Main amplifiers for both systems use laser-diode-pumped Nd:glass slabs oriented at Brewster’s angle, as in NIF, but the slabs are much thinner to allow for cooling by high-velocity helium gas as in the Mercury laser system. We also describe a plan to mass-produce pump-diode lasers to bring diode costs down to the order of


Fusion Science and Technology | 2009

Systems Modeling for the Laser Fusion-Fission Energy (LIFE) Power Plant

Wayne R. Meier; R. Abbott; R. Beach; J. Blink; J. Caird; Alvin C. Erlandson; Joseph C. Farmer; W. Halsey; T. Ladran; Jeffery F. Latkowski; A. MacIntyre; R. Miles; E. Storm

0.01 per Watt of peak output power, as needed to make the LIFE application economically attractive.


Journal of The Optical Society of America B-optical Physics | 1992

Model predicting the temperature dependence of the gain coefficient and the extractable stored energy density in Nd:phosphate glass lasers

Alvin C. Erlandson; G. F. Albrecht; S. E. Stokowski

Abstract A systems model has been developed for the Laser Inertial Fusion-Fission Energy (LIFE) power plant. It combines cost-performance scaling models for the major subsystems of the plant including the laser, inertial fusion target factory, engine (i.e., the chamber including the fission and tritium breeding blankets), energy conversion systems and balance of plant. The LIFE plant model is being used to evaluate design trade-offs and to identify high-leverage R&D. At this point, we are focused more on doing self consistent design trades and optimization as opposed to trying to predict a cost of electricity with a high degree of certainty. Key results show the advantage of large scale (>1000 MWe) plants and the importance of minimizing the cost of diodes and balance of plant cost.

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John A. Caird

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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A. Bayramian

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Kathleen I. Schaffers

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Kenneth S. Jancaitis

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Robert J. Deri

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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S. Sutton

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Christopher A. Ebbers

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Kenneth R. Manes

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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William A. Molander

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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James E. Murray

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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