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Dive into the research topics where Drew Johnson is active.

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Featured researches published by Drew Johnson.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2003

Monochromatic x-ray backlighting of wire-array z-pinch plasmas using spherically bent quartz crystals

Daniel Brian Sinars; M. E. Cuneo; Guy R. Bennett; David Franklin Wenger; L. E. Ruggles; Mark F. Vargas; John L. Porter; R. G. Adams; Drew Johnson; K. L. Keller; Patrick K. Rambo; Dean C. Rovang; Hans Seamen; Walter W. Simpson; I. C. Smith; S. C. Speas

X-ray backlighting systems are being developed to diagnose z-pinch, inertial confinement fusion capsule, and complex hydrodynamics experiments on the 20 MA Sandia Z machine. The x-ray backlighter source is a laser-produced plasma created using the Z-Beamlet laser, a 2 TW, 2 kJ Nd:glass laser recently constructed at Sandia. As an alternative to point-projection radiography, we are investigating a different geometry [S. A. Pikuz et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 68, 740 (1997)] that uses spherically bent crystal mirrors to simultaneously obtain high spatial resolution and a narrow spectral bandwidth. Backlighting systems using the Si Heα line (1.865 keV) and the Mn Heα line (6.15 keV) are discussed. These systems are capable of spatial resolutions in the 5–10 μm range, a field of view as large as 5 mm by 20 mm, and a spectral bandwidth comparable to the width of the emission line used for backlighting.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

X-ray power and yield measurements at the refurbished Z machine

M. C. Jones; D. J. Ampleford; M. E. Cuneo; R. Hohlfelder; Christopher A. Jennings; Drew Johnson; B. Jones; M.R. Lopez; J. MacArthur; J. A. Mills; T. Preston; G. A. Rochau; M. E. Savage; D. Spencer; Daniel Brian Sinars; John L. Porter

Advancements have been made in the diagnostic techniques to measure accurately the total radiated x-ray yield and power from z-pinch implosion experiments at the Z machine with high accuracy. The Z machine is capable of outputting 2 MJ and 330 TW of x-ray yield and power, and accurately measuring these quantities is imperative. We will describe work over the past several years which include the development of new diagnostics, improvements to existing diagnostics, and implementation of automated data analysis routines. A set of experiments on the Z machine were conducted in which the load and machine configuration were held constant. During this shot series, it was observed that the total z-pinch x-ray emission power determined from the two common techniques for inferring the x-ray power, a Kimfol filtered x-ray diode diagnostic and the total power and energy diagnostic, gave 449 TW and 323 TW, respectively. Our analysis shows the latter to be the more accurate interpretation. More broadly, the comparison demonstrates the necessity to consider spectral response and field of view when inferring x-ray powers from z-pinch sources.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2014

Pulsed-coil magnet systems for applying uniform 10–30 T fields to centimeter-scale targets on Sandia's Z facility

Dean C. Rovang; Derek C. Lamppa; M. E. Cuneo; Albert C. Owen; J. L. McKenney; Drew Johnson; S. Radovich; R. J. Kaye; R. D. McBride; C. S. Alexander; Thomas James Awe; Stephen A. Slutz; Adam B Sefkow; Thomas A. Haill; P. A. Jones; J. W. Argo; D. G. Dalton; G. K. Robertson; E.M. Waisman; Daniel Brian Sinars; J. Meissner; M. Milhous; D. N. Nguyen; C. H. Mielke

Sandia has successfully integrated the capability to apply uniform, high magnetic fields (10-30 T) to high energy density experiments on the Z facility. This system uses an 8-mF, 15-kV capacitor bank to drive large-bore (5 cm diameter), high-inductance (1-3 mH) multi-turn, multi-layer electromagnets that slowly magnetize the conductive targets used on Z over several milliseconds (time to peak field of 2-7 ms). This system was commissioned in February 2013 and has been used successfully to magnetize more than 30 experiments up to 10 T that have produced exciting and surprising physics results. These experiments used split-magnet topologies to maintain diagnostic lines of sight to the target. We describe the design, integration, and operation of the pulsed coil system into the challenging and harsh environment of the Z Machine. We also describe our plans and designs for achieving fields up to 20 T with a reduced-gap split-magnet configuration, and up to 30 T with a solid magnet configuration in pursuit of the Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion concept.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006

High-brightness, high-spatial-resolution, 6.151keV x-ray imaging of inertial confinement fusion capsule implosion and complex hydrodynamics experiments on Sandia’s Z accelerator (invited)

Guy R. Bennett; Daniel Brian Sinars; David Franklin Wenger; M. E. Cuneo; R. G. Adams; W. J. Barnard; D.E. Beutler; R. A. Burr; David V. Campbell; Liam D. Claus; J. S. Foresi; Drew Johnson; K. L. Keller; C. Lackey; G. T. Leifeste; L. A. McPherson; Thomas D. Mulville; K. A. Neely; Patrick K. Rambo; Dean C. Rovang; L. E. Ruggles; John L. Porter; Walter W. Simpson; I. C. Smith; Christopher Speas

When used for the production of an x-ray imaging backlighter source on Sandia National Laboratories’ 20MA, 100ns rise-time Z accelerator [M. K. Matzen et al., Phys. Plasmas 12, 055503 (2005)], the terawatt-class, multikilojoule, 526.57nm Z-Beamlet laser (ZBL) [P. K. Rambo et al., Appl. Opt. 44, 2421 (2005)], in conjunction with the 6.151keV, Mn–Heα curved-crystal imager [D. B. Sinars et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 75, 3672 (2004)], is capable of providing a high quality x radiograph per Z shot for various high-energy-density physics experiments. Enhancements to this imaging system during 2005 have led to the capture of inertial confinement fusion capsule implosion and complex hydrodynamics images of significantly higher quality. The three main improvements, all leading effectively to enhanced image plane brightness, were bringing the source inside the Rowland circle to approximately double the collection solid angle, replacing direct exposure film with Fuji BAS-TR2025 image plate (read with a Fuji BAS-5000 sc...


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2014

A Renewed Capability for Gas Puff Science on Sandia's Z Machine

B. Jones; Christopher A. Jennings; Derek C. Lamppa; Stephanie B. Hansen; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; David J. Ampleford; Michael Edward Cuneo; Thomas Strizic; Drew Johnson; M. Jones; Nathan W. Moore; Timothy McGuire Flanagan; J. L. McKenney; E.M. Waisman; C.A. Coverdale; Mahadevan Krishnan; P.L. Coleman; Kristi Wilson Elliott; R. Madden; J. Thompson; A. Bixler; J. Ward Thornhill; J. L. Giuliani; Y. K. Chong; A.L. Velikovich; A. Dasgupta; J. P. Apruzese

A comprehensive gas puff capability is being developed on the Z pulsed power generator. We describe the methodology employed for developing a gas puff load on Z, which combines characterization and modeling of the neutral gas mass flow from a supersonic nozzle, numerical modeling of the implosion of this mass profile, and experimental evaluation of these magnetic implosions on Z. We are beginning a multiyear science program to study gas puff z-pinch physics at high current, starting with an 8-cm diameter double-shell nozzle, which delivers a column of Ar gas that is imploded by the machines fast current pulse. The initial shots have been designed using numerical simulation with two radiation-magnetohydrodynamic codes. These calculations indicate that 1 mg/cm should provide optimal coupling to the driver and 1.6:1 middle:outer shell mass ratio will best balance the need for high implosion velocity against the need to mitigate the magnetic Rayleigh-Taylor instability. The models suggest 300-500-kJ Ar K-shell yield should be achievable on Z, and we report an initial commissioning shot at lower voltage in which 250 kJ was measured. Future experiments will pursue optimization of Ar and Kr K-shell X-ray sources, study fusion in deuterium gas puffs, and investigate the physics of gas puff implosions including energy coupling, instability growth, and radiation generation.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2013

Architecture, implementation, and testing of a multiple-shell gas injection system for high current implosions on the Z accelerator

Mahadevan Krishnan; Kristi Wilson Elliott; R. Madden; P.L. Coleman; J. Thompson; A. Bixler; Derek C. Lamppa; J. L. McKenney; Thomas Strizic; Drew Johnson; O. Johns; M. P. Vigil; B. Jones; D.J. Ampleford; M. E. Savage; M. E. Cuneo; M. C. Jones

Tests are ongoing to conduct ~20 MA z-pinch implosions on the Z accelerator at Sandia National Laboratory using Ar, Kr, and D2 gas puffs as the imploding loads. The relatively high cost of operations on a machine of this scale imposes stringent requirements on the functionality, reliability, and safety of gas puff hardware. Here we describe the development of a prototype gas puff system including the multiple-shell nozzles, electromagnetic drivers for each nozzles valve, a UV pre-ionizer, and an inductive isolator to isolate the ~2.4 MV machine voltage pulse present at the gas load from the necessary electrical and fluid connections made to the puff system from outside the Z vacuum chamber. This paper shows how the assembly couples to the overall Z system and presents data taken to validate the functionality of the overall system.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

The effect of gradients at stagnation on K-shell x-ray line emission in high-current Ar gas-puff implosions

B. Jones; J. P. Apruzese; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; David J. Ampleford; Christopher A. Jennings; Stephanie B. Hansen; Nathan W. Moore; Derek C. Lamppa; Drew Johnson; M. C. Jones; E.M. Waisman; C.A. Coverdale; M. E. Cuneo; G. A. Rochau; J. L. Giuliani; J.W. Thornhill; N.D. Ouart; Y. K. Chong; A.L. Velikovich; A. Dasgupta; Mahadevan Krishnan; P. L. Coleman

Argon gas puffs have produced 330 kJ ± 9% of x-ray radiation above 3 keV photon energy in fast z-pinch implosions, with remarkably reproducible K-shell spectra and power pulses. This reproducibility in x-ray production is particularly significant in light of the variations in instability evolution observed between experiments. Soft x-ray power measurements and K-shell line ratios from a time-resolved spectrum at peak x-ray power suggest that plasma gradients in these high-mass pinches may limit the K-shell radiating mass, K-shell power, and K-shell yield from high-current gas puffs.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2018

A Wolter imager on the Z machine to diagnose warm x-ray sources

J. R. Fein; David J. Ampleford; Julia K. Vogel; Bernie Kozioziemski; Christopher C. Walton; M. Wu; C. R. Ball; A. Ames; J. Ayers; P. M. Bell; Christopher Jay Bourdon; D. K. Bradley; R. Bruni; G. S. Dunham; P. Gard; Drew Johnson; K. Kilaru; C. Kirtley; P. Lake; A. Maurer; L. B. Nielsen-Weber; L. A. Pickworth; M. Pivovaroff; Brian D. Ramsey; O. J. Roberts; G. A. Rochau; S. Romaine; M. Sullivan

A new Wolter x-ray imager has been developed for the Z machine to study the emission of warm (>15 keV) x-ray sources. A Wolter optic has been adapted from observational astronomy and medical imaging, which uses curved x-ray mirrors to form a 2D image of a source with 5 × 5 × 5 mm3 field-of-view and measured 60-300-μm resolution on-axis. The mirrors consist of a multilayer that create a narrow bandpass around the Mo Kα lines at 17.5 keV. We provide an overview of the instrument design and measured imaging performance. In addition, we present the first data from the instrument of a Mo wire array z-pinch on the Z machine, demonstrating improvements in spatial resolution and a 350-4100× increase in the signal over previous pinhole imaging techniques.


IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2015

2-D RMHD Modeling Assessment of Current Flow, Plasma Conditions, and Doppler Effects in Recent Z Argon Experiments

J. Ward Thornhill; J. L. Giuliani; B. Jones; J. P. Apruzese; A. Dasgupta; Y. K. Chong; A. J. Harvey-Thompson; David J. Ampleford; Stephanie B. Hansen; C.A. Coverdale; Christopher A. Jennings; Gregory A. Rochau; Michael Edward Cuneo; Derek C. Lamppa; Drew Johnson; M. Jones; Nathan W. Moore; E.M. Waisman; Mahadevan Krishnan; P.L. Coleman

By varying current-loss circuit parameters, the Mach2-tabular collisional radiative equilibrium 2-D radiation magnetohydrodynamic model was tuned to reproduce the radiative and electrical properties of three recent argon gas-puff experiments (same initial conditions) performed on the Z machine at Sandia National Laboratories. The model indicates that there were current losses occurring near or within the diode region of the Z machine during the stagnation phase of the implosion. The “good” simulation reproduces the experimental K-shell powers, K-shell yields, total powers, percentage of emission radiated in α lines, size of the K-shell emission region, and the average electron temperature near the time-of-peak K-shell power. The calculated atomic populations, ion temperatures, and radial velocities are used as input to a detailed multifrequency ray-trace radiation transport model that includes the Doppler effect. This model is employed to construct time-, space-, and energy-resolved synthetic spectra. The role the Doppler effect likely plays in the experiments is demonstrated by comparing synthetic spectra generated with and without this effect.


international conference on plasma science | 2014

The effect of adding a center jet to Argon gas puff implosions at the Z facility

A. J. Harvey-Thompson; B. Jones; Christopher A. Jennings; David J. Ampleford; Derek C. Lamppa; Stephanie B. Hansen; C.A. Coverdale; M. R. Gomez; G. A. Rochau; Drew Johnson; M. C. Jones; Nathan W. Moore; Timothy McGuire Flanagan; J. Reneker; M. Jobe; L. Lucero; M. E. Cuneo; J.W. Thornhill; J. L. Giuliani; A. Dasgupta

Argon gas puff implosions have been found to be an extremely efficient source of K-shell x-rays (3-4 keV) on the Z pulsed power facility at Sandia National Labs. producing over 300 kJ of K-shell emission in double-shell experiments. Experiments at Double Eagle [1] and Saturn [2] have previously found that adding a central jet of mass to their double-shell gas puff configurations increased the yield substantially.This presentation will describe recent experiments on Z that have investigated the effect of adding a central jet to doubleshell gas puffs on yield and plasma conditions. The central jet was added to two gas puff configurations: a 1:1.6 inner/outer shell mass ratio puff and a faster-imploding 1:1 mass ratio puff. Experimental results and comparisons to simulation will be described.

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B. Jones

Sandia National Laboratories

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Derek C. Lamppa

Sandia National Laboratories

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David J. Ampleford

Sandia National Laboratories

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E.M. Waisman

Sandia National Laboratories

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J. L. Giuliani

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Stephanie B. Hansen

Sandia National Laboratories

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J. P. Apruzese

United States Naval Research Laboratory

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Nathan W. Moore

Sandia National Laboratories

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