Forced Convective Cooling of Foils in a Repetitively Pulsed Electron-Beam Diode

2008 
Electron-beam (e-beam)-pumped high-power gas lasers require the use of a transmission window/foil to separate the vacuum diode from the laser cell. Under repetitive operation, the foil is subject to an e-beam heat load and would eventually fail without cooling. This paper investigates forced convective cooling of a foil in the main amplifier of the Electra KrF laser by flowing the laser gas around a closed loop. The experimental data were taken with one of the two diodes operating at 500 kV, 110 kA, a full-width at half-maximum of 140 ns, and with an external axial magnetic field of 0.14 T. Type-T thermocouples are used to measure the temperature of the foil under a variety of conditions including flow-velocity enhancement due to louver inserts, repetition rate, cathode configuration, gas composition, and height along the foil. A first-order model that considers cooling due to turbulent flow, as well as internal foil thermal conduction and radiation, reproduces the general trends observed in the data. The goal is to keep the temperature of a 25-mum-thick stainless steel foil below the tensile strength and long-term thermal fatigue limits when operating at 5 Hz. The data, in combination with the model, predict that this goal can be achieved by diverting the laser gas to flow at high velocity along the foil surface.
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