Return to search

Structured plasma waveguides and deep EUV generation enabled by intense laser-cluster interactions

<p> Using the unique properties of the interaction between intense, short-pulse lasers and nanometer scale van-der-Waals bonded aggregates (or 'clusters'), modulated waveguides in hydrogen, argon and nitrogen plasmas were produced and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light was generated in deeply ionized nitrogen plasmas. A jet of clusters behaves as an array of mass-limited, solid-density targets with the average density of a gas. </p><p> Two highly versatile experimental techniques are demonstrated for making preformed plasma waveguides with periodic structure within a laser-ionized cluster jet. The propagation of ultra-intense femtosecond laser pulses with intensities up to 2 x10<sup>17</sup> W/cm<sup>2</sup> has been experimentally demonstrated in waveguides generated using both methods, limited by available laser energy. The first uses a 'ring grating' to impose radial intensity modulations on the channel-generating laser pulse, which leads to axial intensity modulations at the laser focus within the cluster jet target. This creates a waveguide with axial modulations in diameter with a period between 35 &mu;m and 2 mm, determined by the choice of ring grating. The second method creates modulated waveguides by focusing a uniform laser pulse within a jet of clusters with ow that has been modulated by periodically spaced wire obstructions. These wires make sharp, stable voids as short as 50 &mu;m with a period as small as 200 &mu;m within waveguides of hydrogen, nitrogen, and argon plasma. The gaps persist as the plasma expands for the full lifetime of the waveguide. This technique is useful for quasi-phase matching applications where index-modulated guides are superior to diameter modulated guides. Simulations show that these 'slow wave' guiding structures could allow direct laser acceleration of electrons, achieving gradients of 80 MV/cm and 10 MV/cm for laser pulse powers of 1.9 TW and 30 GW, respectively. </p><p> Results are also presented from experiments in which a nitrogen cluster jet from a cryogenically cooled gas valve was irradiated with relativistically intense (up to 2 x 10<sup>18</sup> W/cm<sup>2</sup>) femtosecond laser pulses. The original purpose of these experiments was to create a transient recombination-pumped nitrogen soft x-ray laser on the 2<sub>p3/2</sub> &rarr; 1<sub>s1/2</sub> (&lambda; = 24.779 &Aring;) and 2<sub>p1/2</sub> &rarr; 1<sub> s1/2</sub> (&lambda; = 24.785 &Aring;) transitions in H-like nitrogen (N<sup> 6+</sup>). Although no amplification was observed, trends in EUV emission from H-like, He-like and Li-like nitrogen ions in the 15 &ndash;150 &Aring;spectral range were measured as a function of laser intensity and cluster size. These results were compared with calculations run in a 1-D fluid laser-cluster interaction code to study the time-dependent ionization, recombination, and evolution of nitrogen cluster plasmas. </p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:3557663
Date04 May 2013
CreatorsLayer, Brian David
PublisherUniversity of Maryland, College Park
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

Page generated in 0.008 seconds