Mahadevan Krishnan and Kristi Wilson Elliott
Alameda Applied Sciences Corporation, San Leandro, California 94577, USA
C. G. R. Geddes, R. A. van Mourik, and W. P. Leemans
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, USA
H. Murphy and M. Clover
Science Applications International Corporation, La Jolla, California 92121, USA
The design and performance are presented of an electromagnetically driven gas valve [M. Krishnan, J. Wright, and T. Ma, Proceedings of the 13th Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop, Santa Cruz, CA, AIP Conf. Proc. No. 1086 (AIP, New York, 2008)] that opens in <100 μs, closes in <500 μs, and can operate at pressures of ∼1000 psia to drive supersonic nozzles. Such a valve has applications to laser-plasma accelerators, where the fast opening and closing would allow sharper edges to the flow and also allow higher rep-rate operation without loading the vacuum chamber. The valve action is effected by a flyer plate accelerated by the electromagnetic impulse of a low inductance, spiral wound, strip-line coil driven by a capacitor. Gas flows out of the valve when the seal between this flyer plate and the valve seat is broken. The electromagnetic force greatly exceeds the restoring forces provided by a spring and the gas pressure against the valve seat. Piezoresistive sensor and laser interferometer measurements of flow show that the valve opens in ∼100 μs for all pressures up to 800 psia. The closing time is 500 μs, set by the spring constant and mass. The prototype valve has been operated with helium at 0.5 Hz and at 500 psia for ∼1 hour at a time with no cooling.
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© 2011 American Physical Society
URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.033502
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.14.033502