The Review of Laser Engineering
Online ISSN : 1349-6603
Print ISSN : 0387-0200
ISSN-L : 0387-0200
Volume 46, Issue 10
Special Issue on Status of Research and Development of Laser Driven Neutron Sources
Displaying 1-10 of 10 articles from this issue
Special Issue on Status of Research and Development of Laser Driven Neutron Sources
Special Issue
Laser Review
  • Kunioki MIMA, Sadao NAKAI, Yoshiaki, KATO, Yoshiaki KIYANAGI
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 558-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    In this special issue, the present status and the prospects of the development of laser driven neutron sources are reviewed. Compact neutron sources have been widely interested, explored and developed for accelerator and laser systems. In this chapter, the uniqueness, the merits and the critical issues of laser driven neutron sources are described in comparison with accelerator driven neutron sources. The uniqueness is the small system size and the merits are “small size and short pulse of sources”, which are important for the higher spatial resolution of imaging and high energy resolution in spectroscopy. On the other hand, the critical issue of laser driven neutron sources is the low neutron flux in comparison with the accelerator driven neutron sources. In the following chapters, the above merits, critical issues, and the prospects are described in some details.
    Download PDF (458K)
  • Hideki YOSHIZAWA
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 560-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    An overview of the development of the compact neutron source is briefly described. Recent development of a neutron source as well as measurement technique is opening a new era for a small neutron source as a practical probe for materials science. In order to utilize neutron beam as a research probe, there are several ingredients such as handling technique of the neutron beam, the development of time-of-flight measurement technique, and the development of high efficiency neutron detectors, and none of them can lack for a practical instrument. It is also emphasized that the protection from radiation and costs for construction as well as daily operation are two more indispensable factors to be carefully considered.
    Download PDF (361K)
  • Yoshitaka MORI, Yuki ABE, Hiroki TANAKA, Ryohei HANAYAMA, Yoshiaki ...
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 564-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Laser-driven neutron sources offer a unique characteristic as a brightness neutron source because they provide a short pulse duration (less than ns) in time and a small spot size (a few mm2) in space at the source point. The peak flux per driver energy reaches 1017 n/cm2/s/J, which is 1,000 times higher than that achieved by an accelerator-driven source. We compared the characteristics of a laser-driven neutron source with those achieved by an accelerator-driven source by focusing on the amount of neutron production numbers on the source as a function of driver energy. We also present the technological status or perspective of laser-driven neutron sources in order to achieve an average production rate 1011 n/sr/sec that obtained by a compact accelerator-driven neutron source.
    Download PDF (1598K)
  • Shigeki TOKITA, Yoshitaka MORI, Michiaki MORI, Junji KAWANAKA
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 571-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    High-average-power femtosecond lasers with terawatt and petawatt peak powers are essential for the practical achievement of such new technologies as laser-driven accelerators and laser-driven neutron sources. Although the average power of petawatt lasers is currently approaching 100 W, estimates suggest that an average power of the order of 10 kW is required for laser-driven neutron sources. To discuss the feasibility of a petawatt laser with an ultrahigh average power of 10 kW, we present two directions of disk and fiber lasers and propose a conceptual design of a Ti:sapphire chirped-pulseamplification system with an output pulse energy of 100 J and a repetition rate of 100 Hz.
    Download PDF (549K)
  • Junji KAWANAKA, Shigeki TOKITA, Koji TSUBAKIMOTO, Hidetsugu YOSHID ...
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 576-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Repetition rate of a petawatt-class laser using Ti:Sapphire and optical parametric amplification is limited by a high energy pump source. Increasing the repetition rate (average power), in addition to efficient heat removal from the laser material of the pump source, thermal distribution is a significant problem, which results in wavefront distortion. Active-mirror is one of the promising amplifiers due to its high heat removal and insensitivity to thermal wavefront distortion. A 10 J, 100 Hz, 1 kW active-mirror laser will be demonstrated in 2018‒2019 as a feasibility study for 100 J.
    Download PDF (1495K)
  • Akifumi YOGO, Ryohi HANAYAMA, Yuki ABE, Hiroaki NISHIMURA
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 582-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Recently, increasing interest has been focused on the neutron generation by high intensity laser. Especially in this review, we summarize experimental studies on the neutron generation based on “Pitcher-Cather” method, where ions are accelerated by the laser from a thin foil (Pitcher) up to MeVenergy and bombards some materials (Catcher) that generates neutrons via nuclear reactions. We demonstrate a semi-empirical scaling low found on the neutron generation efficiency as a function of the laser intensity, independently of the parameters of Pitcher and Catcher.
    Download PDF (1706K)
  • Jun HASEGAWA, Eiki HOTTA, Kei TAKAKURA, Haruo MIYADERA
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 589-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Inertial Electrostatic Confinement (IEC) fusion devices have great advantages for their use as commercially available compact neutron sources. The principle, history, and recent research activities of the IEC fusion devices are briefly introduced. The prospect of the IEC neutron source is also discussed while comparing it with other small neutron sources.
    Download PDF (533K)
Laser Original
  • Takashi ASAHINA, Hiroki TANAKA, Yuki ABE, Yoshitaka MORI, Akifumi ...
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 594-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    We numerically evaluated the pulse width of a laser-driven neutron source for electron- and protondriven pitcher-catcher schemes with a light water moderator. Particle-in-cell simulations were conducted to simulate laser irradiation on the pitchers that generate energetic charged particles. The simulated results of the charged particle fluxes were passed to Monte Carlo simulations, which calculated the nuclear reactions in the catchers to evaluate the neutron pulse width. The results of our simulations suggest that laser-driven neutron sources have better energy resolution than conventional acceleratordriven neutron sources.
    Download PDF (569K)
  • Jungmoo HAH, Jason NATRESS, John A. NEES, Mark D. HAMMIG, Igor ...
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 599-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: December 18, 2020
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    We present results from experimental investigations to generate a high flux source of energetic neutrons using a short pulse high rep rate laser system. Interactions of the laser pulse with a heavy water stream target allowed the generation of ~105 neutrons/second at an energy of ~2.45 MeV. We used liquid scintillators with pulse shape analysis along with bubble detectors to confirm neutron production. Further optimization of the target as well as an increase in the rep rate of such laser systems has the potential to enable the development of a high flux laser driven portable neutron source.
    Download PDF (957K)
Laser Original
  • Kohei ASANO, Masahiro TSUKAMOTO, Yoshinori FUNADA, Yu SAKON, Kento ...
    2018 Volume 46 Issue 10 Pages 604-
    Published: 2018
    Released on J-STAGE: May 27, 2025
    JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS
    We developed a new laser metal deposition method for cladding functional metals with multiple laser beams and a powder flow. In this method, the temperature of the flying powders in a powder flow was spatially homogeneous at a substrate surface since they were heated with laser beams while flying. When all the powders and the substrate surface were increased to their melting temperatures, a deposition layer was formed on the substrate since a condition of the powders’ welding with the substrate surface was satisfied in the boundary between the powders and the substrate surface. We achieved precise cladding since the size of the dilution layer was minimized in this method. A cobalt base alloy (Stellite 6) film, which was 400 μm thick with a 5 μm dilution zone, was formed on the SUS 304 base plate.
    Download PDF (3009K)
feedback
Top