| Literature DB >> 33795713 |
T Ziegler1,2, D Albach3, C Bernert3,4, S Bock3, F-E Brack3,4, T E Cowan3,4, N P Dover5, M Garten3,4, L Gaus3,4, R Gebhardt3, I Goethel3,4, U Helbig3, A Irman3, H Kiriyama5, T Kluge3, A Kon5, S Kraft3, F Kroll3, M Loeser3, J Metzkes-Ng3, M Nishiuchi5, L Obst-Huebl3,6, T Püschel3, M Rehwald3,4, H-P Schlenvoigt3, U Schramm3,4, K Zeil3.
Abstract
We report on experimental investigations of proton acceleration from solid foils irradiated with PW-class laser-pulses, where highest proton cut-off energies were achieved for temporal pulse parameters that varied significantly from those of an ideally Fourier transform limited (FTL) pulse. Controlled spectral phase modulation of the driver laser by means of an acousto-optic programmable dispersive filter enabled us to manipulate the temporal shape of the last picoseconds around the main pulse and to study the effect on proton acceleration from thin foil targets. The results show that applying positive third order dispersion values to short pulses is favourable for proton acceleration and can lead to maximum energies of 70 MeV in target normal direction at 18 J laser energy for thin plastic foils, significantly enhancing the maximum energy compared to ideally compressed FTL pulses. The paper further proves the robustness and applicability of this enhancement effect for the use of different target materials and thicknesses as well as laser energy and temporal intensity contrast settings. We demonstrate that application relevant proton beam quality was reliably achieved over many months of operation with appropriate control of spectral phase and temporal contrast conditions using a state-of-the-art high-repetition rate PW laser system.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33795713 PMCID: PMC8017008 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-86547-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Illustration of the DRACO PW laser, the experimental area, the two pick-off ports and the different diagnostics for time domain measurements of the laser pulse. (b) Magnified DRACO focal spot measurement at the experimental area with logarithmic color scale for absolute intensities. The black line represents a normalized horizontal line out of the focal intensity distribution, the white dashed circles represent the FWHM, 2 and 4 area. (c,d) Temporal intensity contrast of the DRACO laser on the: (c) ns-range (inset: 100 ps), measured with scanning TOAC (SequoiaHD), (d) ps-range for intrinsic (black) and PM cleaned (red) contrast conditions, measured with single-shot time extended self-referenced spectral interferometry technique[30] (SRSI-ETE).
Figure 2Temporal laser pulse shapes retrieved from SPIDER measurements for different spectral phase configurations (left: after automatic Dazzler Feedback-loop, right: manual phase manipulation GVD 1750 fs, TOD 40k fs). While different laser energy configurations (diagnostic mode—solid blue, power mode—dashed red, power mode & PM—dotted green) show consistent pulse shapes, the two spectral phase settings significantly differ between an almost ideally compressed FTL pulse (dash-dotted grey) and an asymmetrical, slightly longer pulse with shallow rising edge and shifted pre- and postpuls distribution.
Figure 3Maximum proton energies from 400 nm Formvar targets for different GVD and TOD Dazzler values and PM cleaned contrast. Each marker represents one single shot, dashed lines connect mean values. While the maximum energy for the standard settings (GVD=0 fs, TOD=0 fs) is below 30 MeV, the optimized conditions (1750 fs, 40k fs) yield 60 MeV and thus an effective doubling of the maximum energy in this case. The right side plot shows particle numbers from shots with TPS (solid lines) and shots with RCF (individual markers) measurements for the standard (blue) and optimized (green) settings with higher particle numbers in the optimized case .
Figure 4Maximum proton energy with respect to TOD (GVD = 0) for different target materials and thicknesses (represented by different markers and colors) as well as on target laser energy () and temporal contrast (PM and no PM) settings. The upper plot shows the relative energy gain with respect to the standard settings for the different target types and TOD values.
Figure 5Long-term stability of the pulse shape optimization induced enhancement effect over a period of more than one year of operation for a total of 575 shots on 45 days of laser proton acceleration experiments. The laser target configuration was the same or very similar to the one described in the text (18 J pulse energy, plasma mirror cleaned contrast, oblique laser incidence, 200–400 nm thick Formvar targets). Compared are the performances obtained for standard (blue dots) and optimized spectral phase settings (green dots) represented by measured proton cut-off energies with TPS and complemented by RCF stack data (orange stars) whenever available. Each marker represents one single shot. The shaded area represents the standard deviation, the solid lines connect the mean of individual data sets serving as guide for the eye. The red solid curve indicates the performance gain in mean energy that was achieved by finding the optimized spectral phase settings.