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COMPRES annual meeting June 2005. Laser Heated Diamond Anvil Cell. Thomas Duffy, Princeton University Guoyin Shen, GSECARS, University of Chicago Dion Heinz, University of Chicago Andy Campbell, University of Chicago/University of Maryland
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COMPRES annual meeting June 2005 Laser Heated Diamond Anvil Cell Thomas Duffy, Princeton University Guoyin Shen, GSECARS, University of Chicago Dion Heinz, University of Chicago Andy Campbell, University of Chicago/University of Maryland Acknowledgements: A. Kubo, S. Shieh, B. Kiefer, V. Prakapenka
Laser heating facilities in wide use at synchrotrons: -- Advanced Photon Source: GSECARS, HPCAT, SRICAT -- ESRF, SPring-8, ALS, NSLS Mainly variants of near-IR laser, double-sided heating design of G. Shen and colleagues, RSI, 2001. CO2 laser heating systems: -- Advantages: large focal spot, no absorber so avoid chemical reactions and diffraction interference -- Problems: heating limited to <40 GPa?, diamond damage, mainly 1-side only Sample environment (Laser heating workshop: March 2004): -Temperature gradients - Design of heating geometry -Thermal pressure effects - P/T standards
Selected Activities for 2004-2005 3/04 Laser heating workshop at APS (~60 participants) 7/04 Andy Campbell joins project as research associate (50%) 8/04-4/05 Completion of system design and procurement of components including CO2 laser 11/04; 3/05 Princeton/Chicago collaborative beamtime at 13-ID-D 2/05 Safety features completed and protocol finalized for CO2 laser system in GSCEARS laser lab 2/05-6/05 Testing of system design and benchtop experimentation with optical layouts 7/05 Andy Campbell becomes Asst. Prof. U. of Maryland; Search for replacement ongoing
Design goals for CO2 system: CO2 laser heating system for in situ use at APS beamline 13-ID-D Status: heating system established and tested in lab, almost ready for hutch installation Power adequate for heating Fe-free silicates in the DAC Status: 230 W laser more than adequate. 50 µm spot in olivine heats at ~90 W at 38 GPa with Type I diamonds; Heating can be carried out using either Type 1 or Type II diamonds. Robust, reliable system without alignment drift Status: Negligible drift in short term heating. High laser power will require better DAC cooling to be implemented. Power stability as great as achievable Status: CO2 laser can be operated in CW mode. External power modulation is done using a polarizer/attenuator. Motorization of attenuator and feedback loop for stabilization will be implemented Facilitate hutch installation by using existing components wherever appropriate Status: CO2 beam delivery has been designed to be single-sided; viewing optics and temperature measurement will occur on the other side of the DAC, and will utilize the system currently in place for YLF laser heating. Conform to safety requirements at APS Status: Laboratory system interlocked, keyswitched, and shielded. Guidelines for alignment and operation have been established and implemented. Shielding material has been installed also as a liner to laser enclosure in 13-ID-D hutch.
Description of CO2 laser heating components: CO2 laser: Synrad model f201. 230 W output power at 10.6 µm; 5-25 kHz or CW; Linearly polarized, extinction ratio ~150:1; high mode quality (TEM00 98%) Diode alignment laser: Edmund. 633 nm; Class I (0.9 mW) Beamcombiner: Laser Research Optics. Transmits 10.6 µm 99%; reflects 633 nm 85%; ZnSe Beam expander: Infrared Optical Products. 2X; ZnSe; Used to limit beam divergence Mirrors: Ophir and Laser Research Optics. Au/Cu or Au/Si; high reflectivity (>99.8%); warm up by only 2-3 °C at 100 W Attenuator: II-VI Inc. Polarizing attenuator exploits high extinction ratio of laser; consists of 2+2 ZnSe brewster windows; 200:1 extinction; water-cooled; negligible beam deflection when rotated; currently manual operation but planned for motorized operation in hutch Laser focussing lens: Ophir or Laser Research Optics. ZnSe; plano-convex, meniscus, and diffractive lenses have been tested; 1.0” dia, 2.5” f.l. PCX lens currently used; spot size in DAC ~50 µm Final mirror: Under development. Have been using Ophir Au/Si, 3 mm thick. Testing custom Au/C mirror, made by Au coating (APS metrology lab) on glassy carbon substrate Viewing optics: On opposite side of DAC from CO2 laser beam delivery. Negligible CO2 beam transmitted through DAC using type I diamonds; thin silicate glass slide can be installed to block beam if measureable transmission detected with type II diamonds
After CO2 laser heating at 37 GPa ol -> pv + mw 100 mm
Future: --Further bench top testing of CO2 heating system;Some modification of design to adapt to constraints of 13-ID-D diffractometer setup --By May 06, installation of CO2 laser heating system in 13-ID-D complete --Commissioning of the system during the APS 2006-2 run -- Open to general users for 2006-3 run.
Other Ongoing Projects -- Finite element simulations of thermal structure in the laser-heated diamond cell (Kiefer and Duffy, J. Appl. Phys., 2005) --Systematic study of thermal pressure effects and development of new in situ standards at ~20-40 GPa -- Sample environment -- X-ray fluorescent crystals for x-ray/heating alignment -- ultrahigh P-T capabilities Laser heating to 2 MBar
Single Hot Plate Double Hot Plate Micro Furnace
A. Kubo, S. Shieh, T. Duffy, G. Shen, V. Prakapenka Y3Al5O12 doped with 0.05% Ce (YAG:Ce) YAG:Ce fluoresces in visible in response to x-ray excitation ~3 m positioning of x-ray beam and heating spot center Shieh et al., ESPL, 2005
Thermal pressure -- MgO, Pt, Ar, and ruby -- P=18-25 GPa, T ~ 2000 K --Good agreement between MgO and Pt pressures during and after heating --thermal pressure in sample heated at ~1400 K was 2 GPa at 23 GPa --After heating, pressure outside sample (ruby) was 2-3 GPa higher than pressure in heated area A. Kubo, T. S. Duffy, G. Shen, and V. B. Prakapenka