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Dive into the research topics where Jiancai Xu is active.

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Featured researches published by Jiancai Xu.


Applied Physics Letters | 2011

Laser wakefield acceleration of electron beams beyond 1 GeV from an ablative capillary discharge waveguide

Haiyang Lu; Mingwei Liu; Wentao Wang; Cheng Wang; Jiansheng Liu; Aihua Deng; Jiancai Xu; Changquan Xia; Wentao Li; Hui Zhang; Xiaoming Lu; Jianzhou Wang; Xiaoyan Liang; Yuxin Leng; Baifei Shen; Kazuhisa Nakajima; Ruxin Li; Zhizhan Xu

Laser wakefield acceleration of electrons well beyond 1 GeV and optical guiding of ultraintense laser pulses of peak powers up to 160 TW over a 4-cm long ablative capillary discharge plasma channel were experimentally demonstrated. Electron beams, with energies up to 1.8 GeV, were generated by using the 130 TW, 55 fs driving laser pulses. A comparison of oxygen-containing acrylic resin (C:O:H = 4:2:7) capillary and no oxygen-containing polyethylene (C:O:H = 1:0:2) capillary measurements suggests that the injection of electron into the laser wakefield is assisted by the ionization of oxygen K-shell electrons.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Generation of intense high-order vortex harmonics.

Xiaomei Zhang; Baifei Shen; Yin Shi; Xiaofeng Wang; Lingang Zhang; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; Longqiong Yi; Zhizhan Xu

This Letter presents for the first time a scheme to generate intense high-order optical vortices that carry orbital angular momentum in the extreme ultraviolet region based on relativistic harmonics from the surface of a solid target. In the three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulation, the high-order harmonics of the high-order vortex mode is generated in both reflected and transmitted light beams when a linearly polarized Laguerre-Gaussian laser pulse impinges on a solid foil. The azimuthal mode of the harmonics scales with its order. The intensity of the high-order vortex harmonics is close to the relativistic region, with the pulse duration down to attosecond scale. The obtained intense vortex beam possesses the combined properties of fine transversal structure due to the high-order mode and the fine longitudinal structure due to the short wavelength of the high-order harmonics. In addition to the application in high-resolution detection in both spatial and temporal scales, it also presents new opportunities in the intense vortex required fields, such as the inner shell ionization process and high energy twisted photons generation by Thomson scattering of such an intense vortex beam off relativistic electrons.


Physics of Plasmas | 2012

Effect of pulse profile and chirp on a laser wakefield generation

Xiaomei Zhang; Baifei Shen; Liangliang Ji; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; Yahong Yu; Longqing Yi; Xiaofeng Wang; Nasr A. M. Hafz; Victor V. Kulagin

A laser wakefield driven by an asymmetric laser pulse with/without chirp is investigated analytically and through two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. For a laser pulse with an appropriate pulse length compared with the plasma wavelength, the wakefield amplitude can be enhanced by using an asymmetric un-chirped laser pulse with a fast rise time; however, the growth is small. On the other hand, the wakefield can be greatly enhanced for both positively chirped laser pulse having a fast rise time and negatively chirped laser pulse having a slow rise time. Simulations show that at the early laser-plasma interaction stage, due to the influence of the fast rise time the wakefield driven by the positively chirped laser pulse is more intense than that driven by the negatively chirped laser pulse, which is in good agreement with analytical results. At a later time, since the laser pulse with positive chirp exhibits opposite evolution to the one with negative chirp when propagating in plasma, the wakefield in the latter case grows more intensely. These effects should be useful in laser wakefield acceleration experiments operating at low plasma densities.


Physics of Plasmas | 2010

Ultrahigh energy proton generation in sequential radiation pressure and bubble regime

Xiaomei Zhang; Baifei Shen; Liangliang Ji; Fengchao Wang; Meng Wen; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; Yahong Yu

Protons in a microtarget embedded in an underdense high-mass plasma can be accelerated sequentially by the radiation pressure of a short circularly polarized laser pulse and the induced wake bubble field in the background plasma, which has been shown in detail by two-dimensional particle in cell simulations. It has been found that instead of using transverse Gaussian pulses proton energy can be increased dramatically by using a transverse super-Gaussian laser pulse. With a 2.14x10{sup 23} W/cm{sup 2} laser pulse in a tritium plasma of density 1.5x10{sup 20}/cm{sup 3}, 76 GeV high-quality quasimonoenergetic protons have been obtained. The scaling relations between the obtainable proton energy and the laser amplitude as well as the background plasma density have been shown.


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2013

Scheme for proton-driven plasma-wakefield acceleration of positively charged particles in a hollow plasma channel

Longqing Yi; Baifei Shen; K. V. Lotov; Liangliang Ji; Xiaomei Zhang; Wenpeng Wang; Xueyan Zhao; Yahong Yu; Jiancai Xu; Xiaofeng Wang; Yin Shi; Lingang Zhang; Tongjun Xu; Zhizhan Xu

A new scheme for accelerating positively charged particles in a plasma wakefield accelerator is proposed. If the proton drive beam propagates in a hollow plasma channel, and the beam radius is of order of the channel width, the space charge force of the driver causes charge separation at the channel wall, which helps to focus the positively charged witness bunch propagating along the beam axis. In the channel, the acceleration buckets for positively charged particles are much larger than in the blowout regime of the uniform plasma, and stable acceleration over long distances is possible. In addition, phasing of the witness with respect to the wave can be tuned by changing the radius of the channel to ensure the acceleration is optimal. Two dimensional simulations suggest that, for proton drivers likely available in future, positively charged particles can be stably accelerated over 1 km with the average acceleration gradient of 1.3 GeV/m.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Controlled electron acceleration in the bubble regime by optimizing plasma density

Meng Wen; Baifei Shen; Xiaomei Zhang; Fengchao Wang; Zhangying Jin; Liangliang Ji; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; Kazuhisa Nakajima

Improvement of the quality of the monoenergetic electron bunch generated in the laser wakefield is investigated. The electrostatic field is more intense near the back of the bubble than at other locations in the bubble. By optimizing the density gradient of background plasma, the local dephasing problem can theoretically be overcome and the electron bunch can be stably accelerated at the back of the bubble so that the accelerated electrons experience nearly the same electric field. Three-dimensional simulations were performed. Compared with the standard wakefield acceleration schemes, a better-quality electron bunch, with narrower energy spread and higher energy, is obtained with a shorter acceleration distance.


New Journal of Physics | 2010

Generation of a large amount of energetic electrons in complex-structure bubble

Jiancai Xu; Baifei Shen; Xiaomei Zhang; Meng Wen; Liangliang Ji; Wenpeng Wang; Yahong Yu; Kazuhisa Nakajima

By means of particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations, we found that when the focus size of a laser pulse is much larger than the plasma wavelength and when the laser power is hundreds of times larger than the critical power required for relativistic self-focusing, a large complex bubble is formed. The transversal size of the bubble depends on the laser spot size. Owing to the large bubble size, a bunch of electrons with the total charge in the range of a few tens of nano- Coulombs is trapped and accelerated in the bubble. When the plasma density is 2◊10 19 cm 3 , the charge of the energetic electron bunch with energy above 5MeV exceeds 45nC with a laser spot size of 60µm. Electrons continuously self-injected into such a complex bubble serve as an effective source of high- charge electron bunches.


Physics of Plasmas | 2009

High-energy monoenergetic proton bunch from laser interaction with a complex target

Fengchao Wang; Baifei Shen; Xiaomei Zhang; Zhangying Jin; Meng Wen; Liangliang Ji; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; M. Y. Yu; John R. Cary

Generation of high-energy proton bunch in the interaction of a high-power laser pulse with a complex target consisting of a front horizontal slice adjoining a conventional heavy ion and proton double-layer slab is investigated using two-dimensional particle-in-cell simulation. The laser pulse propagates along both sides of the slice. A large number of hot electrons are generated and accelerated by the surface ponderomotive force, and transported through the double layer, forming a backside sheath field which is considerably stronger and more localized than that produced by the electrons from a simple double layer. As a result, the protons in the proton layer can be accelerated to energies more than three times, and the energy spread halved, that from the simple double layer.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Positron acceleration in a hollow plasma channel up to TeV regime

Longqing Yi; Baifei Shen; Liangliang Ji; K. V. Lotov; Alexander Sosedkin; XiaomeiZhang; Wenpeng Wang; Jiancai Xu; Yin Shi; Lingang Zhang; Zhizhan Xu

Nowadays, humans understanding of the fundamental physics is somehow limited by the energy that our high energy accelerators can afford. Up to 4 TeV protons are realized in the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Leptons, such as electrons and positrons, however gained energies of about 100 GeV or less. Multi-TeV lepton accelerators are still lacking due to the relatively low acceleration gradient of conventional methods, which may induce unbearable cost. On the other hand, plasmas have shown extraordinary potential in accelerating electrons and ions, providing orders of magnitude higher acceleration fields of 10–100 GV/m. In such context, we propose a plasma-based high-energy lepton accelerator, in which a weakly focusing plasma structure is formed near the beam axis. The structure preserves the emittance of the accelerated beam and produces low radiation losses. Moreover, the structure allows for a considerable decrease of the witness energy spread at the driver depletion stage.


New Journal of Physics | 2014

Proton Acceleration in Underdense Plasma by Ultraintense Laguerre-Gaussian Laser Pulse

Xiaomei Zhang; Baifei Shen; Lingang Zhang; Jiancai Xu; Xiaofeng Wang; Wenpeng Wang; Longqiong Yi; Yin Shi

A three-dimensional (3D) particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation is used to investigate witness proton acceleration in underdense plasma with a short intense Laguerre?Gaussian (LG) laser pulse. Driven by the LG10 laser pulse, a special bubble with an electron pillar on the axis is formed in which protons can be well confined by the generated transversal focusing field and accelerated by the longitudinal wakefield. The risk of scattering prior to acceleration with a Gaussian laser pulse in underdense plasma is avoided, and protons are accelerated stably to much higher energy. In the simulation, a proton beam has been accelerated to 7 GeV from 1 GeV in underdense tritium plasma driven by a 2.14???1022 W cm?2 LG10 laser pulse.

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Baifei Shen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Wenpeng Wang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaomei Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Liangliang Ji

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Zhizhan Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yahong Yu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Tongjun Xu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Lingang Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yin Shi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Longqing Yi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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