Resource Type

Materials testing using laser energy deposition (open access)

Materials testing using laser energy deposition

A convenient method for determining the elastic constants of materials has been devised using the energy from a Q-switched neodymium-glass laser. Stress waves are induced in materials having circular rod or rectangular bar geometries by the absorption of energy from the laser. The wave transit times through the material are recorded with a piezoelectric transducer. Both dilatation and shear wave velocities are determined in a single test using an ultrasonic technique and these velocities are used to calculate the elastic constants of the material. A comparison of the constants determined for ten common engineering materials using this method is made with constants derived using the conventional ultrasonic pulse technique and agreement is shown to be about one percent in most cases. Effects of material geometry are discussed and surface damage to the material caused by laser energy absorption is shown.
Date: December 20, 1977
Creator: Wilcox, W.W. & Calder, C.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Directions for possible upgrades of the Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF) (open access)

Directions for possible upgrades of the Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF)

The Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF) may be upgraded by extending the time of plasma sustenance in an approach to steady-state operation and/or by increasing the neutral-beam injection energy. Some parameter bounds for these upgrades are discussed as they relate to a definition of the required neutral-beam development.
Date: December 20, 1977
Creator: Damm, C. C.; Coensgen, F. H.; Devoto, R. S.; Molvik, A. W.; Porter, G. D.; Shearer, J. W. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plasma experiments with 1. 06-. mu. m lasers at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory (open access)

Plasma experiments with 1. 06-. mu. m lasers at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory

Recent laser fusion experiments at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory have provided basic data concerning: laser beam propagation and absorption in high temperature plasmas, electron energy transport processes that transfer the absorbed laser energy to the high-density ablation region, the general fluid dynamic expansion and compression of the heated plasma, and the processes responsible for the production of 14-MeV neutrons during implosion experiments. Irradiation experiments were performed with Nd:YAG glass laser systems: the two-beam Janus (less than or equal to40 J/100 ps, approx.0.4 TW) and Argus (less than or equal to140 J, 35 ps, approx.4 TW), and the single beam Cyclops (less than or equal to70 J/100 ps, approx.0.7 TW). Two classes of targets have been used: glass microshells (approx.40 to 120 ..mu..m in diameter with approx.0.75-..mu..m-thick walls) filled with an equimolar deuterium-tritium mixture, and disks (approx.160 to 600 ..mu..m in diameter and approx. 10 ..mu..m thick) of several compositions. The targets were supported in vacuum (pressure less than or equal to10/sup -5/ Torr) by thin glass stalks. This paper reports on results related to the propagation, absorption, and scattering of laser light by both spherical and planar targets.
Date: December 20, 1976
Creator: Ahlstrom, H. G.; Holzrichter, J. F.; Manes, K. R.; Storm, E. K.; Boyle, M. J.; Brooks, K. M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library