LLNL’s novel approach utilizes a number of techniques to improve reconstruction accuracy:
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- Photoconductive Semiconductor Switches (PCSS) (9)
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- (-) Particle Accelerators (2)
Technology Portfolios
![Cross Section of the High-Voltage Insulator Joint](/sites/default/files/styles/scale_exact_400x400_/public/2023-05/HighVoltageInsulatorJoint.png?itok=afTeKYkH)
The approach is to build a high voltage insulator consisting of two materials: Poly-Ether-Ether-Ketone (“PEEK”) and Machinable Ceramic (“MACOR”). PEEK has a high stress tolerance but cannot withstand high temperatures, while MACOR has high heat tolerance but is difficult to machine and can be brittle. MACOR is used for the plasma-facing surface, while PEEK will handle the stresses and high…
![An artist’s concept rendering of a 3.5-meter linear induction accelerator (LIA) with four lines-of-sight toward a patient. The blue elements magnetically focus and direct the LIA’s electron beams.](/sites/default/files/styles/scale_exact_400x400_/public/2023-04/ArtistConceptofLIA.png?itok=Q2EzmJb1)
LLNL’s approach is to use their patented Photoconductive Charge Trapping Apparatus (U.S. Patent No. 11,366,401) as the active switch needed to discharge voltage across a vacuum gap in a particle accelerator, like the one described in their other patent (U.S. Patent No.
![A cold-spray chamber is shown during deposition, with the nozzle at the top of the image and a near-full density sample being fabricated in the center. Particles of the brittle thermoelectric bismuth telluride are accelerated to more than 900 meters per second, or almost Mach 3, in inert gas and directed onto a copper surface, laying down the strips that form the basis of a functioning thermoelectric generator to harvest waste heat. Graphic by Jacob Long/LLNL](/sites/default/files/styles/scale_exact_400x400_/public/2021-02/Cold%20Spray_875x500px.jpg?itok=hjM9UrWO)
![Intensification of laser in simulations and electrons being accelerated](/sites/default/files/styles/scale_exact_400x400_/public/2022-06/intensification%20of%20laser%20in%20simulations%20and%20electrons%20being%20accelerated_875x500px.jpg?itok=bdZS_mHA)
LLNL pioneered the use of tomographic reconstruction to determine the power density of electron beams using profiles of the beam taken at a number of angles. LLNL’s earlier diagnostic consisted of a fixed number of radially oriented sensor slits and required the beam to be circled over them at a fixed known diameter to collect data. The new sensor design incorporates annular slits instead,…