| Literature DB >> 35173182 |
Y Kuramitsu1,2, T Minami3, T Hihara3, K Sakai3, T Nishimoto3, S Isayama4,5, Y T Liao4, K T Wu4,6, W Y Woon7,8, S H Chen4, Y L Liu4,9, S M He10, C Y Su10, M Ota11, S Egashira11, A Morace11, Y Sakawa11, Y Abe3, H Habara3, R Kodama3,11, L N K Döhl12,13, N Woolsey12, M Koenig3,14, H S Kumar15, N Ohnishi15, M Kanasaki16, T Asai16, T Yamauchi16, K Oda16, Ko Kondo17, H Kiriyama17, Y Fukuda17.
Abstract
Graphene is known as an atomically thin, transparent, highly electrically and thermally conductive, light-weight, and the strongest 2D material. We investigate disruptive application of graphene as a target of laser-driven ion acceleration. We develop large-area suspended graphene (LSG) and by transferring graphene layer by layer we control the thickness with precision down to a single atomic layer. Direct irradiations of the LSG targets generate MeV protons and carbons from sub-relativistic to relativistic laser intensities from low contrast to high contrast conditions without plasma mirror, evidently showing the durability of graphene.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35173182 PMCID: PMC8850449 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-06055-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic setup of the experiment with the large-area suspended graphene target (LSG). (b,c) The Raman spectrum and the optical microscope image for a typical LSG, respectively. The accelerated ions are detected with: (d) a stack of radiochromic films (RCFs) and solid state nuclear track detector (CR-39) and (e) Thomson parabola spectrometer.
Figure 2High contrast defocused shots: energy dependence. TPS images from three successive 4L-LSG target shots with increasing laser energies with (a) 4.40 J measured before the compression chamber, corresponding intensity W cm, where the 32% enclosed energy is taken into account[22], and the normalized intensity , (b) 11.3 J, W cm, , and (c) 19.7 J, Wc m, . (d,e) The energy distribution functions of protons and C after subtracting the background signals as discussed in the Supplementary information. (f,g) The maximum energies of protons and carbons (C–C), and the maximum energies divided by the charge state Z, respectively.
Figure 3High contrast best focus shots: energy dependence. Same as Fig. 2 except for 8-layer LSG with best focus: (a) 4.24 J, W cm, , (b) 11.4 J, 2.86 W cm, , and (c) 19.3 J, 4.83 W cm, .
Figure 4High contrast best focus shots: reproducibility. Three successive nominally identical shots with 8-layer LSG: (a) the same shot as in Fig. 3c, 19.3 J, 4.83 W cm, , (b) 18.2 J, 4.55 W cm, , and (c) 19.2 J, W cm, . The ion pits on CR-39 in stack detector: (d) the proton pits on the second CR-39 with the aluminum foil and two RCFs, corresponding to the energy of 12.2–13.2 MeV, and (e) the carbon pits on the first CR-39 covered with a 12 m aluminum foil with the energy range between 14 and 94 MeV.
Figure 5Low contrast shot with double-layer LSG. (a) Contrast measurements for low and high contrast experiments. The left and right axes show the normalized and maximum intensity being W cm, respectively. The horizontal dotted line represents the first ionization threshold of carbon for the field ionization. (b) The carbon ionization thresholds for each charge state. (c) The proton energy distribution function obtained from TPS with double-layer LSG. The laser energy is 14.8 J corresponding to W cm and .
Figure 6Off-line experiment: transmission and absorption. (a) Schematic image of setup for the LSG transmission/reflection measurement. (b) The transmission (T), reflection (R), and absorption rates (A) are plotted against the number of layer of LSG. The error bars represent the standard deviation of the measurements. The dotted lines represent the theoretical transmission (blue) and absorption rates (red)[26].
Figure 7(a) The snapshots from 2D Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation at 20 fs from the laser peak arrival at the 8 layer LSG target for best focus. The laser electric field (blue-red), electron (magenta), carbon (yellow), and proton number densities (cyan) are overlaid. The color scales for the number densities are set to be identical. (b) Energy distribution functions calculated from all the protons (blue) and carbons C (red) in the simulation box of (a), normalized as . The top and bottom axes show the proton and carbon energy, where the top axis is adjusted as 1/6 of carbon energy. The red dashed line represents the pure carbon with pre-ionization.