Suppressing Thermal Energy Drift in the LLNL Flash X-Ray Accelerator Using Linear Disk Resistor Stacks

Abstract

This paper addresses thermal drift in sodium thiosulfate liquid resistors and their replacement with linear disk resistors from HVR Advanced Power Components. Sodium thiosulfate resistors in the FXR induction linear accelerator application have a temperature coefficient of ~1.8%/ C. The FXR Marx banks send an 8kJ pulse through eight 524 cu cm liquid resistors at a repetition rate of up to 1 every 45 seconds. Every pulse increases the temperature of the solution by ~0.4 deg C which produces a 0.7% change in resistance. The typical cooling rate is ~0.4 deg C per minute which results in ~0.1% energy drop per pulse during continuous pulsed operations. A radiographic accelerator is extraordinarily sensitive to energy variations. Changes in beam energy produce movement in beam transport, changes in spot size, and large dose variations. If self-heating were the only problem, we could predict the increase in input voltage required to compensate for the energy loss. However, there are other variables that influence the temperature of the resistors such as focus magnet heating, changes in room temperature, changes in cooling water, where the cell is located, etc. Additionally not all of the resistors have equivalent cooling rates and as many as 32 resistors are driven from a single power source.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 01, 2011
Accession Number
ADA607909

Entities

People

  • Blake R. Kreitzer
  • Otto C. Luchterhand
  • Timothy L. Houck

Organizations

  • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Abstracts
  • Coefficients
  • Energy
  • Impedance
  • Linear Accelerators
  • Liquids
  • Particle Accelerators
  • Peak Power
  • Power
  • Pulsed Power
  • Resistance
  • Temperature Coefficients
  • Test Stands
  • Thermal Resistance
  • Transport Ships
  • Water
  • X Rays

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Electrical Engineering
  • Nuclear and Radiation Engineering.
  • Thermal Physics or Thermal Science.