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Table-top laser-based proton acceleration in nanostructured targets

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 Added by Manuel Blanco Fraga
 Publication date 2016
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The interaction of ultrashort, high intensity laser pulses with thin foil targets leads to ion acceleration on the target rear surface. To make this ion source useful for applications, it is important to optimize the transfer of energy from the laser into the accelerated ions. One of the most promising ways to achieve this consists in engineering the target front by introducing periodic nanostructures. In this paper, the effect of these structures on ion acceleration is studied analytically and with multi-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. We assessed the role of the structure shape, size, and the angle of laser incidence for obtaining the efficient energy transfer. Local control of electron trajectories is exploited to maximise the energy delivered into the target. Based on our numerical simulations, we propose a precise range of parameters for fabrication of nanostructured targets, which can increase the energy of the accelerated ions without requiring a higher laser intensity.



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Ion acceleration in the MeV range can be routinely achieved with table-top laser technology. One of the current challenges is to improve the energy coupling from the laser to the proton beam without increasing the laser peak power. Introducing nanostructures at the front target surface was shown to be beneficial for an efficient transfer of energy to the electrons. In this manuscript, we study by using full-scale three-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations and finite laser pulses, the process when a proposed optimal target with triangular nanostructure (previously found to allow 97% laser energy absorption) is used . We demonstrate that the absorbed laser energy does not depend on the dimensionality in the range of parameters presented. We also present an analytical model for laser absorption that includes deviations from the ideal conditions. This is supported by a numerical parameter study that establishes the tolerance with respect to the nanostructure size, use of different ion species, existence of preplasma, etc. We found that altering the target thickness or using different ions does not affect the absorption, but it does affect the energy redistribution among the different plasma species. The optimal configuration ($h = 1~lambda,~ w = 0.7~ lambda$) is robust with respect to the target fabrication errors. However, high contrast laser pulses are required, because a pre-plasma layer with a thickness on the order of 0.5 lambda is enough to lower the laser absorption by more than a 10% in a non-optimal scenario.
Efficient laser ion acceleration requires high laser intensities, which can only be obtained by tightly focusing laser radiation. In the radiation pressure acceleration regime, where the tightly focused laser driver leads to the appearance of the fundamental limit for the maximum attainable ion energy, this limit corresponds to the laser pulse group velocity as well as to another limit connected with the transverse expansion of the accelerated foil and consequent onset of the foil transparency. These limits can be relaxed by using composite targets, consisting of a thin foil followed by a near critical density slab. Such targets provide guiding of a laser pulse inside a self-generated channel and background electrons, being snowplowed by the pulse, compensate for the transverse expansion. The use of composite targets results in a significant increase in maximum ion energy, compared to a single foil target case.
Although the interaction of a flat-foil with currently available laser intensities is now considered a routine process, during the last decade emphasis is given to targets with complex geometries aiming on increasing the ion energy. This work presents a target geometry where two symmetric side-holes and a central-hole are drilled into the foil. A study of the various side-holes and central-hole length combinations is performed with 2-dimensional particle-in-cell simulations for polyethylene targets and a laser intensity of 5.2x10^21 W cm^-2. The holed-targets show a remarkable increase of the conversion efficiency, which corresponds to a different target configuration for electrons, protons and carbon ions. Furthermore, diffraction of the laser pulse leads to a directional high energy electron beam, with a temperature of ~40 MeV or seven times higher than in the case of a flat-foil. The higher conversion efficiency consequently leads to a significant enhancement of the maximum proton energy from holed-targets.
The use of ultrathin solid foils offers optimal conditions for accelerating protons from laser-matter interactions. When the target is thin enough that relativistic self-induced transparency (RSIT) sets in, all of the target electrons get heated to high energies by the laser, which maximizes the accelerating electric field and therefore the final ion energy. In this work, we first investigate how ion acceleration by ultraintense femtosecond laser pulses in transparent CH$_2$ solid foils is modified when turning from normal to oblique ($45^circ$) incidence. Due to stronger electron heating, we find that higher proton energies can be obtained at oblique incidence but in thinner optimum targets. We then show that proton acceleration can be further improved by splitting the laser pulse into two half-pulses focused at opposite incidence angles. An increase by $sim 30,%$ in the maximum proton energy and by a factor of $sim 4$ in the high-energy proton charge is reported compared to the reference case of a single normally incident pulse.
130 - S. Kar , K. F. Kakolee , B. Qiao 2012
The acceleration of ions from ultra-thin foils has been investigated using 250 TW, sub-ps laser pulses, focused on target at intensities up to $3times10^{20} Wcm2$. The ion spectra show the appearance of narrow band features for proton and Carbon peaked at higher energy (in the 5-10 MeV/nucleon range) and with significantly higher flux than previously reported. The spectral features, and their scaling with laser and target parameters, provide evidence of a multispecies scenario of Radiation Pressure Acceleration in the Light Sail mode, as confirmed by analytical estimates and 2D Particle In Cell simulations. The scaling indicates that monoenergetic peaks with more than 100 MeV/nucleon energies are obtainable with moderate improvements of the target and laser characteristics, which are within reach of ongoing technical developments.
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