scholarly journals Enhanced ion acceleration in the ultra-intense laser driven magnetized collisionless shocks

2019 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 043026
Author(s):  
Wen-shuai Zhang ◽  
Hong-bo Cai ◽  
Liu-lei Wei ◽  
Jian-min Tian ◽  
Shao-ping Zhu
2012 ◽  
Vol 109 (18) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Kar ◽  
K. F. Kakolee ◽  
B. Qiao ◽  
A. Macchi ◽  
M. Cerchez ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (9) ◽  
pp. 093106 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Andreev ◽  
K. Platonov ◽  
A. Sharma ◽  
M. Murakami

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yasuhiro Kuramitsu ◽  
Takumi Minami ◽  
Takamasa Hihara ◽  
Kentaro Sakai ◽  
Takahiro Nishimoto ◽  
...  

Abstract Atomically thin graphene is a transparent, highly electrically and thermally conductive, light-weight, and the strongest material. To date, graphene has found applications in many aspects including transport, medicine, electronics, energy, defense, and desalination. We demonstrate another disruptive application of graphene in the field of laser-ion acceleration, in which the unique features of graphene play indispensable role. Laser driven ion sources have been widely investigated for pure science, plasma diagnostics, medical and engineering applications. Recent developments of laser technologies allow us to access radiation regime of laser ion acceleration with relatively thin targets. However, the thinner target is the less durable and can be easily broken by the pedestal or prepulse through impact and heating prior to the main laser arrival. One of the solutions to avoid this is plasma mirror, which is a surface plasma created by the foot of the laser pulse on an optically transparent material working as an effective mirror only for the main laser peak. So far diamond like carbon (DLC) is used to explore the ion acceleration in extremely thin target regime (< 10 nm) with plasma mirrors, and it is necessary to use plasma mirrors even in moderately thin target regime (10-100 nm) to realize energetic ion generation. However, firstly DLC is not 2D material, and therefore, it is very expensive to make it thin and flat. Moreover, graphene is stronger than diamond at extremely thin regime, and much more reasonable for mass-production. Furthermore, installing and operating plasma mirrors at high repetition rate is also costly. Here we show another direct solution using graphene as the thinnest and strongest target ever made. We develop a facile transfer method to fabricate large-area suspended graphene (LSG) as target for laser ion acceleration with precision down to a single atomic layer. Direct irradiation of the LSG targets with an ultra intense laser generates energetic carbons and protons evidently showing the durability of graphene without plasma mirror. This extends the new frontier of science on graphene under extreme electromagnetic field, such as energy frontier and nuclear fusion.


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