Executive summary
In this paper, we describe the science and technology of a novel laser-based approach to carbon-free energy production via an accelerator-driven system (ADS)[ 1] with a thorium-fuelled subcritical system, in short, a laser-driven ADS (LDADS). The advantages of thorium fuel include its relative abundance in Earth’s crust compared to uranium, reduced transuranic waste production and curtailed proliferation. A potential additional advantage to ADS energy production compared to critical reactors is that many of the safety features of Generation IV International Forum (GIF) reactors become redundant or unnecessary. Moreover, ADSs can also transmute minor actinides (MAs)[ Reference Bowman2– Reference Rubbia, Abderrahim, Björnberg, Carluec, Gherardi, Romero, Gudowski, Heusener, Leeb, von Lensa, Locatelli, Magill, Martinez-Val, Monti, Mueller, Napolitano, Pérez-Navarro, Salvatores, Carvalho Soares and Thomas4] contained in the spent nuclear fuel of past and existing reactors, thus contributing to the solution of the crucial nuclear waste disposal issue[ 5]. These innovations will significantly help the acceptance of nuclear fission energy by public opinion. The current design of an ADS relies on radio frequency (RF) powered conventional accelerator technology, but, after more than 40 years of developments, ADSs are still facing significant issues in reaching the required specifications, and the large footprint requires large financial investments (a few billion euros).
An entirely new acceleration technology has emerged in the past 20 years that uses laser light and tiny plasmas to accelerate particles, instead of RF microwaves in bulky resonant cavities and superconducting cryo-cooled magnets constraining the conventional accelerators. Laser–plasma accelerators (LPAs) reach accelerating gradients as high as 50 GeV/m, orders of magnitude higher than those achievable with RF accelerators, which are limited by breakdown, implying a much reduced accelerator length. While still under development, LPAs have already reached key milestones, becoming an established alternative for multi-GeV scale electron acceleration[ Reference Gonsalves, Nakamura, Daniels, Benedetti, Pieronek, de Raadt, Steinke, Bin, Bulanov, van Tilborg, Geddes, Schroeder, Tóth, Esarey, Swanson, Fan-Chiang, Bagdasarov, Bobrova, Gasilov, Korn, Sasorov and Leemans6] capable of driving a free electron laser (FEL)[ Reference Wang, Li, Liu, Zhang, Qi, Yu, Liu, Fang, Qin, Wang, Xu, Wu, Leng, Li and Xu7]. All this was possible due to the establishment of a new generation of ultra-intense lasers, using chirped pulse amplification (CPA), invented by 2018 Nobel laureates D. Strickland and G. Mourou[ Reference Strickland and Mourou8], to reach extreme focused intensities over ultra-short pulse duration. CPA laser technology is now progressing rapidly from scientific grade to industrial standard repetitive operation at high average power, thus enabling the exploitation of LPAs in several fields, with nuclear applications becoming now of paramount importance.
As discussed here, the use of laser-driven accelerator technology for an ADS offers a number of major advantages compared to conventional RF accelerators, including reduced footprint and investment costs, higher reliability and enhanced operational safety to meet the required standards of commercial operations. It is shown that scaling existing LPA technology to the specifications needed to drive an ADS requires a staged approach, each stage aiming at a given milestone and likely to generate an extraordinary and unique fallout of innovation. Neutron production by LPA has reached a full laboratory demonstration[ Reference Jiang, Zou, Zhao, Hu, Han, Yu, Yu, Yin and Shao9– Reference Hill and Wu16] for base-level values of the number of neutrons per laser pulse energy. Projection to the full ADS scale will require further development for increased wall-plug efficiency and repetition rate of the driving laser system to become sustainable. Unlike ADSs based on a single RF accelerator, an LDADS will feature a number of neutron generation units driven by high-average-power pulsed lasers, ensuring robustness, redundancy for trouble-free operation and flexibility. Quantitative analysis of both the experimental results and theoretical simulations presented here shows that the rate of neutrons required to drive an ADS is within the limits of current advanced models of neutron generation, either by a proton beam or an electron beam. These advanced models are yet to be proven in the laboratory to extend the results of pioneering experiments to higher performance, with many installations already moving in this direction, motivated by emerging nuclear applications.
1. Introduction
Access to abundant cheap energy, especially electricity, has been shown to be strongly correlated with a reduction in poverty and an increase in prosperity, as shown in Figure 1. Throughout most of the 1800s and the preindustrial era, more than 90% of people lived in extreme poverty; in contrast, today less than 10% of the global population lives in such conditions[
Reference Bourguignon and Morrisson18]. Historically, we relied on fossil fuels to generate energy, with the consequence of increased
${\mathrm{CO}}_2$
concentration in the atmosphere. In fact, climate change has been a topic of debate for decades. Now, many are coming to the conclusion that solar, wind and other renewable energy sources, increasingly available in place of fossil fuels, may not be enough to sustain the increasing energy needs and to enable active decarbonization pursued by many governments.

Figure 1 Historical evolution of the percentage of population in poverty and fossil fuel consumption[ 17].
Thermonuclear fusion is attracting renewed great attention[
Reference Danson and Gizzi19] due to recent scientific breakthroughs in the research of inertial[
Reference Abu-Shawareb, Acree, Adams, Adams, Addis, Aden, Adrian, Afeyan, Aggleton and Aghaian20,
Reference Ma21] and magnetic[
Reference Wan and Xu22] confinement fusion. However, fusion reactors are still at a truly conceptual level, and fusion power will probably not be available for several decades. In contrast, nuclear fission offers diverse practical solutions that may fill the energy gap, as the transition away from coal, oil and natural gas progresses to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and the exhaustion of limited resources. In fact, the European Union (EU) has labelled fission nuclear energy projects as green investments after a year-long battle between governments. Some believe that this also makes perfect sense, considering that nuclear power plants are free from direct
${\mathrm{CO}}_2$
emissions.
The nuclear industry uses critical reactors for energy production, in which the number of neutrons released by fission is just enough to sustain a controlled chain reaction. An ADS relies on a subcritical reactor in which more neutrons are absorbed than generated and a self-sustained chain reaction is not possible. To run such a device at a constant power level, additional neutrons are needed. One of the ways of generating such neutrons is by bombarding a heavy metal target inside the reactor with a high-energy proton beam supplied by an accelerator (a process known as spallation[ Reference Bauer23]).
The current design of the ADS is based on conventional RF accelerator technology, either with circular geometry (such as cyclotrons) or linear accelerators (LINACs), to generate high-current, high-energy protons for neutron generation via spallation. There is also a suggestion for an electron-driven ADS, where accelerated electrons generate neutrons through the photonuclear process[ Reference Liu, Zhang, Liu, Dou and Wang24]. After more than 40 years of development, ADSs are still facing significant issues in achieving the required specifications. The very high reliability of RF accelerator technology (a few trips per year) needed for operation is yet to be achieved, and the large footprint requires large financial investments (a few billion euros).
The LDADS is a newly developed concept based on the idea of coupling a subcritical nuclear reactor to a laser-particle accelerator. Laser-driven particle accelerators in place of RF LINACs and cyclotrons promise significant benefits because of the assumed smaller footprint that is more adapted to industrial usage and reduced investment costs. The first proposal for an LDADS that combines CPA laser technology with Rubbia et al.’s [ Reference Rubbia, Rubio, Buono, Carminati, Fiétier, Gálvez, Gel`es, Kadi, Klapisch, Mandrillon, Revol and Roche25] suggestion of a thorium-molten salt reactor (MSR) is optimized for transmutation of nuclear waste and energy production[ Reference Tajima, Necas, Mourou, Gales and Leroy26]. Tajima et al. have also anticipated that an LDADS is well suited to be controlled with artificial intelligence (AI).
The key technology of an LDADS, the LPA of charged particles, has been developing at a dramatic rate in the past two decades[ Reference Albert, Couprie, Debus, Downer, Faure, Flacco, Gizzi, Grismayer, Huebl, Joshi, Labat, P. Leemans, R. Maier, Mangles, Mason, Mathieu, Muggli, Nishiuchi, Osterhoff, Rajeev, Schramm, Schreiber, Thomas, Vay, Vranic and Zeil27]. Laser-driven accelerators are currently established in the laboratory, and large-scale user facilities are becoming operational (ELI-ERIC[ Reference Mourou, Korn, Sandner and Collier28]) or are being planned and constructed (EuPRAXIA[ Reference Assmann, Weikum, Akhter, Alesini, Alexandrova, Anania, Andreev, Andriyash, Artioli and Aschikhin29], k-BELLA[ Reference Colby and Len30], KALDERA[ Reference Panofski, Braun, Dirkwinkel, Gonzalez, Hübner, Hülsenbusch, Jeppe, Kirchen, Maier, Messner, Osterhoff, Palmer, Walker, Winkler, Eichner, Jalas, Schnepp, Trunk, Werle, Härer, Bründermann, Müller, Papash, Widmann, Kaluza and Sävert31]), while a number of medium-scale facilities have been successfully operating for years. Neutron production by LPAs has reached a full laboratory demonstration. The single-shot experiments[ Reference Jiang, Zou, Zhao, Hu, Han, Yu, Yu, Yin and Shao9– Reference Hill and Wu16, Reference Norreys, Fews, Beg, Bell, Dangor, Lee, Nelson, Schmidt, Tatarakis and Cable32– Reference Roth, Jung, Falk, Guler, Deppert, Devlin, Favalli, Fernandez, Gautier, Geissel, Haight, Hamilton, Hegelich, Johnson, Merrill, Schaumann, Schoenberg, Schollmeier, Shimada, Taddeucci, Tybo, Wagner, Wender, Wilde and Wurden35] have been revealed for base-level values of the number of neutrons per laser pulse energy. Recent experiments from 0.5 Hz to 1 kHz repetition rates[ Reference Treffert, Curry, Ditmire, Glenn, Quevedo, Roth, Schoenwaelder, Zimmer, Glenzer and Gauthier36– Reference Stuhl, Varmazyar, Elekes, Halász, Gilinger, Füle, Karnok, Buzás, Kovács, Nagy, Mohácsi, Bíró, Csedreki, Fenyvesi, Fülöp, Korkulu, Kuti, Csontos, Geetha, Tóth, Szabó and Osvay40] have demonstrated the potential for various scientific, industrial and social applications[ Reference Brenner, Mirfayzi, Rusby, Armstrong, Alejo, Wilson, Clarke, Ahmed, Butler, Haddock, Higginson, McClymont, Murphy, Notley, Oliver, Allott, Hernandez-Gomez, Kar, McKenna and Neely41– Reference Mirfayzi, Gryaznevich, Lonsdale, Naylor, Takase and Kingham48].
In this paper we show that scaling existing LPA technology to the specifications needed to drive an ADS requires a staged approach, each stage aiming at a given milestone and likely to generate an extraordinary and unique fallout of innovation. Projection to the full ADS scale will require further development for increased wall-plug efficiency and repetition rate of the driving laser system to become sustainable. Unlike ADSs based on a single conventional accelerator, an LDADS will feature a number of neutron generation units driven by high-average-power pulsed lasers, ensuring robustness, redundancy for trouble-free operation and flexibility. Quantitative analysis of both experimental results and theoretical simulations presented here shows that the rate of neutrons required to drive an ADS is within the limits of current advanced models of neutron generation, either by a proton beam or an electron beam.
2. Nuclear energy industry
2.1. Fusion
Inspired by the production of energy in the stars, we look at nuclear fusion as an energy source for a safe and long-term solution that can definitively replace fossil energy sources. However, the goal of nuclear fusion for energy in the laboratory remains elusive, after great global efforts. In recent years, steps have been taken with important advances in knowledge and through the construction of promising new experimental facilities. The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER)[ Reference Bigot49], currently in construction in Cadarache, France, aims to realize a gigantic plant to demonstrate for the first time a net production of energy from magnetic confinement fusion. The scheme of the installation, based on the tokamak concept, takes advantage of the knowledge acquired in decades of research with experimental installations of reduced dimensions, such as the Frascati Tokamak Upgrade (FTU, Italy)[ Reference Pucella, Alessi, Amicucci, Angelini, Apicella, Apruzzese, Artaserse, Belli, Bin and Boncagni50] and the Culham Joint European Torus (JET, UK)[ Reference Rebut, Bickerton and Keen51].
Laser-driven inertial fusion energy (IFE)[ Reference Ghoranneviss and Elahi52– Reference Batani, Colaïtis, Consoli, Danson, Gizzi, Honrubia, Kühl, Le Pape, Miquel, Perlado, Scott, Tatarakis, Tikhonchuk and Volpe55] is based on the concept of ignition of inertial confinement fusion (ICF) that was proposed in 1972[ Reference Nuckolls, Wood, Thiessen and Zimmerman56, Reference Basov, Krokhin and Sklizkov57], followed by a worldwide effort to demonstrate ignition of inertial fusion in the laboratory. IFE is finally developing today after decades of experiments and thanks to important achievements in the knowledge of fundamental physical processes. Recent historical breakthroughs in ignition have been achieved at the National Ignition Facility (NIF, United States)[ Reference Moses58] and are briefly discussed for completeness in Section 9.3.
Governments in various countries are undertaking the modernization and development of their power generation infrastructure. Although still in the laboratory development phase, fusion power is starting to play a vital role in future energy generation plans, as demonstrated by the emerging national fusion roadmaps issued by leading countries, including the United States, the UK, France, Germany and Italy, and by the increasing public and private funding of fusion companies, now exceeding 7 billion euros[ 59]. The global fusion power market chart predicts significant growth in the coming years. Several factors are at play here, propelling growth in the global fusion power market. One of the most prominent factors is that in the coming years the world will see a massive demand for electricity. Rapid urbanization and modernization are further compounding the situation. It is believed that the population will increase by 2 billion, reaching 9.7 billion by 2050, with a probable consequent increase in energy needs[ Reference Romanello, Salvatores, Schwenk-Ferrero, Gabrielli, Vezzoni, Rineiski and Fazio60]. Moreover, as environmental awareness increases along with mounting concerns about power generated through conventional means, the acceptance of fusion power and its popularity has further increased.
2.2. Fission
Following the recent geopolitical situation arising from the Russia–Ukraine war, a review is ongoing on the planned shutdown of some existing nuclear plants that still have a great potential for energy production. Japan has also reopened many of the suspended reactors after the Earthquake in 2011. At the same time, new nuclear power plants are being planned and built all over the world. However, the current nuclear fleet is approaching the end of its useful life due to the lack of investment in new nuclear installations over the last 30 years. On the other hand, large-scale commercial reactors (
$>1$
GW, 7 billion dollars per unit) feature proven generating technology with a global deployment history.
Recognizing the affordability challenge of large-scale plants, the nuclear industry has proposed small modular reactor (SMR) technologies (300 MW–1 GW, 3 billion dollars per hybrid prototype-commercial unit) as an alternative. According to a feasibility study conducted by the UK National Nuclear Laboratory[ Reference Waddington61], there is a very significant global market need for energy that cannot be met in all circumstances by large-scale nuclear reactors, which presents a real opportunity for SMRs. The size of the potential global SMR market will be approximately 65–85 GW by 2035, valued at 250 billion to 400 billion dollars. We should note that the current worldwide electrical power consumption is approximately 25,000 MWh and is expected to increase by approximately another 15,000 MWh by 2035, of which the SMR could cover up to approximately 1000 MWh.
There is ongoing research on new types of nuclear power plants, including thorium-based designs and models that clarify the problem of nuclear waste storage using reprocessed fuel rods[ Reference Humphrey and Khandaker62]. These are inherently safer than the old power plants. The GIF has selected seven reactor technologies[ Reference Kelly63] for further research and development (R&D), namely the high-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTGR), the very-high-temperature reactor (VHTR), the MSR, the supercritical water-cooled reactor (SCWR), the gas-cooled fast reactor (GFR), the sodium-cooled fast reactor (SFR) and the lead-cooled fast reactor (LFR). The most developed GIF reactor design, the SFR, has received the greatest share of funding over the years with a number of demonstration facilities operated, as well as two commercial reactors, operating in Russia. One of these, the MSR, is considered to potentially have the highest inherent safety of all models[ Reference Emblemsvåg64]. After years of experimental operations at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (United States) and even a commercial unit in Hamm-Uentrop (Germany), an experimental thorium-based MSR is to start operation in Wuwei, China.
With the right support, appropriate investments, licensing and public acceptance, certain nuclear designs could be available in a reasonable time frame. This might be the only way to achieve net zero by 2050.
In addition to energy production, the ADS was also proposed as an effective way to transmute radioactive isotopes contained in the spent fuel of existing reactors[ Reference Gokhale, Deokattey and Kumar3, Reference Gulevich, Kalugin, Ponomarev, Seliverstov and Seregin65], thus contributing to the management of nuclear waste disposal. However, the ADS is not officially listed among GIF reactors[ Reference Abram and Ion66], as it is not a critical device. In contrast, all other GIF reactors rely on critical fission reactions to function. This is a feature of ADSs that is potentially attractive for reducing the investment in safety and operating costs. The European Sustainable Nuclear Industrial Initiative (ESNII) funds an ADS subcritical reactor, the Multi-purpose hYbrid Research Reactor for High-tech Applications (MYRRHA)[ Reference Abderrahim, Kupschus, Malambu, Benoit, Van Tichelen, Arien, Vermeersch, D’hondt, Jongen, Ternier and Vandeplassche67]. A similar project is in development in Japan (J-PARC).
3. Conventional radio frequency particle accelerators
Key questions in science today aim at understanding our universe from the infinitely small to the infinitely large and how the elements are made in the universe. For 15 billion years since the Big Bang, stars have transmuted the atomic nuclei into new elements. Earth was formed starting from the cooled ashes of these cosmic cauldrons. So far, most of these questions have been investigated using large observatories or accelerators such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) of CERN, the world largest accelerator collider generating proton beams with more than 10 TeV energy/proton.
Since the discovery of X-ray radiation by Röntgen (1895) using electrostatic discharge ionizing a gas and hence accelerating electrons, followed by R. Wideroe (1925) with the concept of the betatron and linear (electron) accelerator and E. O. Lawrence with the cyclotron (1930) where protons were accelerated up to 80 keV, a new branch of science and technology, namely ‘accelerator science’, has emerged. It has profoundly revolutionized our understanding of matter and its constituents as well as their interactions.
Accelerators are giant microscopes, tools and technologies with which one is able to see and study the invisible from the atomic scale (
${10}^{-10}$
m) to deep inside the nucleus and its constituents (protons, neutrons, quarks). The final particle energies reached through basic electromagnetic processes range from eV to TeV (
${10}^{12}$
eV) and are correlated with the scales they can explore in matter (from
${10}^{18}$
m down to the Å scale). Therefore, accelerators are formidable tools to measure nature with unprecedented accuracy and resolution. They can achieve energies, pressures, time and spatial resolutions that up to now no other tool has been able to approach. Accelerators are at the root of recent major discoveries about the elementary constituents of matter, the last one being the Higgs boson discovered at the LHC.
3.1. Accelerator overview
Looking at the past 75 years, particle accelerators can be classified according to their technologies and the particle beam characteristics they are producing, namely beam intensity and/or power, final energy and spatial dimensions.
Concerning proton and ion accelerators, three main branches have emerged, namely electrostatic accelerators, the iconic Van de Graaff accelerator, with the tandem design accelerating high voltage (HV) up to 25 MV, and cyclotrons and synchrotrons, with circular accelerators using a high magnetic field combined with RF acceleration. The size and particle energy of circular accelerators range, respectively, from 1 m diameter for 1 MeV to 27 km for 10 TeV, while LINACs based on successive accelerating structures driven by RF electromagnetic fields feature a size and final particle energy spanning from 1 m for MeV to km for 100 GeV. By interactions with the appropriate target, these machines can produce secondary beams of intense neutrons, pions, positrons, muons and other so-called rare isotope beams.
Accelerators are extremely diffused globally and can be very different in cost, from thousands to billions of euros. They are part of a worldwide multibillion euro industrial market, as illustrated in Table 1. Accelerator science and technology is central to the most important advancements in medicine[ Reference Peach, Wilson and Jones70], materials[ Reference Staron, Schreyer, Clemens and Mayer71], energy[ Reference Heidet, Brown and Tahar72], security[ Reference Chao and Chou73] and climatology[ Reference Elmore and Phillips74] that emanate from nuclear physics (see, for example, Ref. [Reference Balosso, Baroni, Bleicher, Brandenburg, Burigo, Colautti, Combs, Cuttone, Debus, De marzi, Dobeš, Durante, Evangelista, Fagotti, Gales, Georg, Graeff, Haberer, Habrand, Maj, Mammar, Mazal, Meyroneinc, Mishustin, Olko, Patriarca, Pshenichnov, Roellinghoff, Röhrich and Wessels75]). The economic impact is significant: the US Department of Energy (DOE) estimates 500 billion dollars from particle beam accelerators; the European Physical Society estimated a total turnover from physics activity in Europe of 3700 billion dollars in 2010.
Table 1 Worldwide inventory of accelerators detailed for 2000 and 2014. Figures in italic for 2014 are not updated[ 68]. The current total number is up to 30,000 accelerators. For a full review see also Ref. [Reference Widodo, Bastianudin, Triatmoko, hardjo, Diah, Adabiah, Andriyanti, Mulyani and Wijaya69].

The answers to some important questions facing our planet will come from interdisciplinary efforts in medicine, energy, climate and the marketplace. Today, the vast majority of accelerators are not used for fundamental science but for industrial processes and for applications relevant to society. Among these, the most notable applications include electronics, cutting and welding of electron beams[ Reference Gonzalez-Martinez, Bachmatiuk, Bezugly, Kunstmann, Gemming, Liu, Cuniberti and Rümmeli76, Reference Sun, Karppi and Mater77], hardening materials[ Reference Wang, Lei, Liu, Ma, Liu, Xiao and Shi78], medical diagnosis[ Reference Balosso, Baroni, Bleicher, Brandenburg, Burigo, Colautti, Combs, Cuttone, Debus, De marzi, Dobeš, Durante, Evangelista, Fagotti, Gales, Georg, Graeff, Haberer, Habrand, Maj, Mammar, Mazal, Meyroneinc, Mishustin, Olko, Patriarca, Pshenichnov, Roellinghoff, Röhrich and Wessels75, Reference Wang, Chen, Santos Augusto, Liang, Qin, Liu and Liu79], cancer treatment[ Reference Balosso, Baroni, Bleicher, Brandenburg, Burigo, Colautti, Combs, Cuttone, Debus, De marzi, Dobeš, Durante, Evangelista, Fagotti, Gales, Georg, Graeff, Haberer, Habrand, Maj, Mammar, Mazal, Meyroneinc, Mishustin, Olko, Patriarca, Pshenichnov, Roellinghoff, Röhrich and Wessels75, Reference Lennox80, Reference Kiyanagi, Sakurai, Kumada and Tanaka81], also including highly innovative concepts[ Reference Panaino, Piccinini, Andreassi, Bandini, Borghini, Borgia, Di Naro, Labate, Maggiulli, Portaluri and Gizzi82], monitoring air pollution and climate change[ Reference Chmielewski, Zimek, Iller, Tyminski and Licki83], examination and isotope dating of artifacts and ancient objects[ Reference Kutschera84], sterilization of food and medical goods[ Reference Pillai and Shayanfar85] and cargo scanning[ Reference Tang86]. Possible future applications to alternative energy sources[ Reference Hossain, Taher, Das and Nucl87] are also being developed. More than 400 billion euros of end products are produced, sterilized or examined using industrial accelerators annually worldwide.
More than 26,000 accelerators have been built globally over the last 60 years to produce particle beams for use in industrial processes, which does not include the 11,000 particle accelerators that have been produced exclusively for medical therapy. More than 24,000 patients have been treated by the recently introduced hadron therapy in the EU and more than 75,000 worldwide. About 200 particle accelerators are used for research with an estimated consolidated running budget of 1 billion euros.
3.2. Evolution of accelerators, beam energy and intensity frontiers
Here we describe the state-of-the-art and the recent progress in modern accelerator technologies (1980–2020). The three branches of accelerators have continuously evolved, reaching higher energies[ Reference Aberle, Alonso, Brüning, Fessia, Rossi, Tavian, Zerlauth, Adorisio, Adraktas and Ady88] and higher intensity[ Reference Ma, Wen, Zhang, Yu, Cheng, Yang, Huang, Wang, Zhu, Cai, Zhao, Mao, Yang, Zhou, Xu, Yuan, Xia, Zhao, Xiao and Zhan89] and beam power[ Reference Leeper, Alberts, Asay, Baca, Baker, Breeze, Chandler, Cook, Cooper, Deeney, Derzon, Douglas, Fehl, Gilliland, Hebron, Hurst, Jobe, Kellogg, Lash, Lazier, Matzen, McDaniel, McGurn, Mehlhorn, Moats, Mock, Muron, Nash, Olson, Porter, Quintenz, Reyes, Ruggles, Ruiz, Sanford, Schmidlapp, Seamen, Spielman, Stark, Struve, Stygar, Tibbetts-Russell, Torres, Vargas, Wagoner, Wakefield, Hammer, Ryutov, Tabak, Wilks, Bowers, McLenithan and Peterson90]. The collider machines (e– and e+ laser sources, electron cyclotron resonance ion sources for P and ions, superconducting coils and RF superconducting cavities for acceleration) had reached maturity by the beginning of 2000; examples include the Large Electron-Positron (LEP) at CERN[ Reference Taylor, Treille and Ser91] (100 GeV e+, e− collider), Tevatron at Fermilab[ Reference Pasquinelli, Drendel, Gollwitzer, Johnson, Lebedev, Leveling, Morgan, Nagaslaev, Peterson, Sondgeroth and Werkema92] (TeV p-pbar collider) and RHIC at Brookhaven[ Reference Harrison, Peggs and Roser93] (100 GeV heavy-ion collider). The world record of 13 TeV for p-pbar collisions was reached at CERN with a complex combination of its accelerators (LINAC, PS, SPS, LHC)[ Reference Fartoukh, Kostoglou, Camillocci, Arduini, Bartosik, Bracco, Brodzinski, Bruce, Buffat, Calviani, Cerutti, Efthymiopoulos, Goddard, Iadarola, Karastathis, Lechner, Metral, Mounet, Nuiry, Papadopoulou, Papaphilippou, Petersen, Persson, Redaelli, Rumolo, Salvant, Sterbini, Timko, Garcia and Wenninger94]. However, the energy frontier of the technology of ‘classical’ accelerators, for example, the next generation of accelerators at 1000 TeV, would confirm Fermi’s vision (1954): ‘with conventional technology, the accelerator would girdle the Earth’.
From the point of view of intensity and beam power frontier, in the last two decades, thanks to the development of superconductive (SC) RF cavities and high-intensity electrons or ion sources, the International Linear Collider (ILC) project, an electron and positron superconducting LINAC longer than 30 km and with energies over 500 GeV, is being considered[
Reference Bambade, Barklow, Behnke, Berggren, Brau, Burrows, Denisov, Faus-Golfe, Foster, Fujii, Fuster, Gaede, Grannis, Grojean, Hutton, List, List, Michizono, Miyamoto, Napoly, Peskin, Poeschl, Simon, Strube, Tian, Titov, Vos, White, Wilson, Yamamoto, Yamamoto and Yokoya95]. Synchrotrons also find an extremely important application in the high-brightness light sources based on FEL schemes[
Reference Pellegrini, Marinelli and Reiche96]. Accelerator-based light sources have taken advantage of these technologies, giving rise to high flux of dense and highly collimated photons (
${10}^9$
photons/s from eV to 10 keV, such as SOLEIL[
Reference Nadolski, Abeillé, Abiven, Bouvet, Brunelle, Buteau, Béchu, Chado, Couprie, Delétoille, Gamelin, Herbeaux, Hubert, Lamarre, Leroux, Lestrade, Loulergue, Marchand, Marcouillé, Nadji, Nagaoka, Zéphir, Ribeiro, Schagene, Tavakoli and Tordeux97] and ELETTRA[
Reference Wagner98]). The high-intensity frontier was the objective of few e–, p and ions SC LINAC machine projects, such as the following.
-
• European X-ray Free Electron Laser (European XFEL), Hamburg, Germany: The most powerful coherent X-ray laser source, SC LINAC 15 GeV, 3.4 km. Total cost 1.22 billion euros (2005), and operating at full design value[ Reference Aghababyan, Bacher, Bartkiewicz, Böckmann, Bruns, Clausen, Delfs, Duval, Fröhlich, Gerhardt, Gindler, Hatje, Hensler, Jaeger, Kammering, Karstensen, Keller, Kocharyan, Korth, Labudda, Limberg, Meykopff, Moeller, Penning, Petrosyan, Petrosyan, Petrosyan, Petrosyan, Pototzki, Rehlich, Rettig-Labusga, Rickens, Schlesselmann, Schoeneburg, Sombrowski, Staack, Stechmann, Szczesny, Walla, Wilgen, Wilksen, Wu, Abeghyan, Beckmann, Boukhelef, Coppola, Esenov, Fernandes, Gessler, Giambartolomei, Hauf, Heisen, Karabekyan, Kumar, Maia, Parenti, Silenzi, Namin, Szuba, Teichmann, Tolkiehn, Weger, Wiggins, Wrona, Yakopov and Youngman99].
-
• European Spallation Source (ESS), Lund, Sweden: MW class, state-of-the-art proton SC RF accelerator. The most powerful neutron source worldwide, which is currently in its commissioning phase[ Reference Garoby, Vergara, Danared, Alonso, Bargallo, Cheymol, Darve, Eshraqi, Hassanzadegan, Jansson, Kittelmann, Levinsen, Lindroos, Martins, Midttun, Miyamoto, Molloy, Phan, Ponton, Sargsyan, Shea, Sunesson, Tchelidze, Thomas, Jensen, Hees, Arnold, Juni-Ferreira, Jensen, Lundmark, Gazis, Weisend, Anthony, Pitcher, Coney, Göhran, Haines, Linander, Lyngh, Oden, Carling, Andersson, Birch, Cereijo, Friedrich, Korhonen, Laface, Mansouri-Sharifabad, Monera-Martinez, Nordt, Paulic, Piso, Regnell, Zaera-Sanz, Aberg, Breimer, Batkov, Lee, Zanini, Kickulies, Bessler, Ringnér, Jurns, Sadeghzadeh, Nilsson, Olsson, Presteng, Carlsson, Polato, Harborn, Sjögreen, Muhrer and Sordo100, Reference Miyamoto, Eshraqi, Levinsen, Milas and Noll101].
-
• MYHRRA, Brussels, Belgium: The multi-disciplinary project is based on an SC proton LINAC, 600 MeV, 5 mA. It was funded by Belgium and is set to finish construction in 2035 with an estimated cost 1.5 billion euros. It includes ADS transmutation, and isotope separation online facilities. The Phase-1, a 100 MeV accelerator is currently under construction[ Reference Abderrahim, Kupschus, Malambu, Benoit, Van Tichelen, Arien, Vermeersch, D’hondt, Jongen, Ternier and Vandeplassche67, Reference Van Oost, Terentyev and Abderrahim102].
-
• Système de Production d’Ions Radioactifs en Ligne de 2e generation (SPIRAL2), Caen, France: LINAC, 33 MeV
$\mathrm{H}^{+}$
, 40 MeV
$\mathrm{D}^{+}$
(5 mA) and 14.5 MeV for heavy ions with a mass-to-charge ratio A/Q
$\le$
3 (1 mA). In operation since December 2019[
Reference Gales103,
Reference Orduz, Uriot, Emmanuel, Pierre-Lagniel, Savalle, Normand, Jamet and Di Giacomo104]. -
• Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB), East Lansing, United States: SC LINAC for heavy ions with a primary beam power of 400 kW and beam energies
$\ge 200$
MeV/u. The first beam was in spring 2022[
Reference Wei, Ao, Arend, Beher, Bollen, Bultman, Casagrande, Chang, Choi and Cogan105].
All of these examples plus the summary graph shown in Figure 2 demonstrate the maturity of high-power accelerator technologies.

Figure 2 Beam power frontier for ion beam science and applications.
4. Accelerator-driven systems for energy production
In this context, the accelerator is a high-intensity proton generator machine, designed to provide a beam on a spallation target for neutron generation. Produced neutrons are supposed to feed a subcritical core, that is, a core that could not sustain a chain nuclear reaction without the support of an external neutron source. In principle, both LINACs and cyclotrons could be used for this purpose, but due to reliability and availability issues, a LINAC is likely to be preferred, as pointed out in projects such as PDS-XADS[ Reference Pierini, Barni, Michelato, Monaco, Novati, Paulon, Pierini, Sertore, Pagani, Ferdinand, Safa, Palanque, Biarrotte, Commeaux, Junquera, Mueller, Tkatchenko, Burgazzi, Jongen and Vandeplassche106].
4.1. Accelerator-driven energy production (fast thorium reactor)
The choice of thorium (Th-232) as nuclear fuel in ADSs is particularly attractive, partly because it is more abundant than uranium in Earth’s crust. Another advantage of thorium is that it reduces proliferation risks (the produced U-233 is often contaminated with U-232, which decays emitting strong gamma, notably from daughter thallium-208 making handling, storage and weaponization of U-233 extremely challenging) as well as the radioactive hazards posed by heavy MAs in the spent reactor fuel (although it was observed that some daughters in the decay chain in the long term can reduce this advantage).
The most prominent proposer of an ADS using thorium fuel and optimized for energy production is Carlo Rubbia, who referred to this concept as the energy amplifier[ Reference Rubbia, Abderrahim, Björnberg, Carluec, Gherardi, Romero, Gudowski, Heusener, Leeb, von Lensa, Locatelli, Magill, Martinez-Val, Monti, Mueller, Napolitano, Pérez-Navarro, Salvatores, Carvalho Soares and Thomas4]. This is a reactor with a fast neutron spectrum and a subcritical core that contains thorium and an initial quantity of fissile material, such as plutonium from a conventional light-water reactor (LWR). Molten lead is chosen as the coolant, both because of its thermodynamic properties and because it does not slow down neutrons. In addition to extracting heat from the core, the coolant also acts as a spallation target for neutron production. To drive the system, a proton accelerator with an energy of 1 GeV and a beam current of about 10 mA is required. To achieve such specifications, one can use accelerators with circular geometry (such as cyclotrons) or LINACs. Since the power output (with a nominal thermal power of about 1500 MW) is to be regulated by variations of the proton beam intensity, no control rods are necessary. Reprocessing of the spent fuel consists of thorium replenishment and removal of fission products. The MAs are reloaded in the reactor, as their high fission probability with fast neutrons allows for their more efficient incineration (i.e., destruction by fission).
However, several technical challenges need to be overcome before a fully operational ADS could be built. The main technical challenge for the ADS has to do with developing a reliable particle accelerator with sufficient power to drive the reactor (an average proton beam power of 10 MW is required for the energy amplifier). At present, proton accelerators with energy in the 1 GeV range are limited to about 1.5 MW in terms of beam power. Another important figure of merit is the beam availability, which should be improved from the current 85%–90% level to at least 95% if commercial ADS operation is to be achieved. In addition, mastering the reprocessing of Th-based fuel remains a challenge at the industrial level.
4.2. Accelerator-driven transmutation
One of the main concerns of the public when discussing nuclear energy is the safe storage of nuclear waste, especially spent nuclear fuel. Since the 1990s, transmutation has been known as a special technique with which the radiotoxicity level of the radioactive waste can be reduced to that of mined uranium, that is, 300–400 years (instead of 300,000 years). The core idea is[ Reference Tommasi, Delpech, Grouiller and Zaetta107] to convert the particularly long-lived radioactive components into short-lived ones through nuclear reactions using free neutrons or by spallation.
The nuclear fuel spent in LWRs, which represent the majority of nuclear power plants operating around the world today, is approximately made up of the following elements[ Reference Pershagen and Bowen108].
-
• Some 94% is still uranium, with an enrichment of approximately 1% (so, still more enriched than the natural one), which can be recovered.
-
• Approximately 1% is plutonium, which is the main contributor to the long-term radiotoxic inventory. Plutonium can be recycled (PUREX process) and used to manufacture new fuel and be safely burned in thermal and fast reactors[ Reference Broeders, Kiefhaber and Wiese109], as already done for decades.
-
• Some 4%–5% of the initial fuel mass really ‘burned’, producing fission products: their radiotoxicity reduces to the level of uranium extracted from mines in approximately 400 years, so they are not considered dangerous in the repository from the radiotoxic point of view.
-
• Some 0.1% of the initial fuel mass is made up of MAs, that is, neptunium, americium and curium, which are the main radiotoxic contributors after plutonium (their decay time is of the order of 10,000 years, compared to 100,000 years for plutonium). Transmutation technologies focus on these nuclides (see Figure 3).

Figure 3 Radiotoxicity components of discharged liquid water reactor fuel (60 GWd/t). Adapted from Ref. [Reference Salvatores and Palmiotti110].
The basis of transmutation is that the ratio between fission to the capture cross-section is sensibly higher for MAs at higher neutron energies. Hence, when fast neutrons (i.e.,
$E>1$
MeV) are used, fission becomes more likely than capture (Figure 4).

Figure 4 Am-241 radiative capture and fission cross-section comparison versus energy.
The main reasons for adopting a subcritical system are as follows.
-
• The control of a nuclear reactor system is given by a delayed neutron fraction, called
$\beta$
. This number is sensibly lower for plutonium and MAs with respect to uranium, so, if proper transmutation efficiencies have to be achieved, as a proper amount of MA must be loaded in the fuel (
$>10\%$
), a subcritical system (i.e., the infinite multiplication factor of the six-factor formula satisfies
${k}_{\mathrm{inf}}<1$
) is needed. -
• Doppler feedback is reduced with the increasing number of MAs.
-
• Critical reactors can transmute, in fact, 2–4 kg of MA per TWh, while a subcritical system can transmute up to 42 kg/TWh.
Following the idea proposed in 1980 in the United States by Takahashi and Bowman, the European Roadmap for developing a new approach using an ADS for nuclear waste incineration was promoted by C. Rubbia et al. in 2001[ Reference Rubbia, Abderrahim, Björnberg, Carluec, Gherardi, Romero, Gudowski, Heusener, Leeb, von Lensa, Locatelli, Magill, Martinez-Val, Monti, Mueller, Napolitano, Pérez-Navarro, Salvatores, Carvalho Soares and Thomas4]. MYRRHA[ Reference Van Oost, Terentyev and Abderrahim102] is the first project that couples a nuclear reactor to a proton accelerator that is currently under design[ Reference De Bruyn, Abderrahim, Baeten and Leysen111– Reference Abderrahim, Baeten, Sneyers, Schyns, Schuurmans, Kochetkov, Van den Eynde and Biarrotte113]. It is a fast, subcritical system under development by the Belgian Nuclear Research Center (SCK-CEN) with EU (and possibly international) funding. The total cost is estimated at 1.2 billion euros, with the facility projected to be fully operational in 2038. The main objective of the project is to demonstrate the ADS concept at a power level (100 MW), which would allow future extrapolation to an industrial-scale reactor and also to study MA transmutation techniques. A lead-bismuth eutectic is used as the coolant, while mixed oxide (MOX) fuel forms the core of the reactor. A critical mode is also available for reactor research and radioisotope production.
In the framework of the EUROTRANS project, which aims to demonstrate the feasibility of transmutation in an advanced 50–100
${\mathrm{MW}}$
experimental transmuter accelerator-driven facility (XT-ADS), it was determined that to drive an industrial transmuter, an accelerator should provide protons up to 800 MeV, with a current intensity of 20 mA[
Reference Artioli, Chen, Gabrielli, Glinatsis, Liu, Maschek, Petrovich, Rineiski, Sarotto and Schikorr114,
Reference Podlech, Barbanotti, Bechtold, Biarrotte, Busch, Bousson, Dziuba, Junquera, Klein, Luong, Mueller, Olry, Panzeri, Pierini, Ratzinger, Tiede and Zhang115] (which would generate approximately 3
$\times$
10
${}^{18}$
n/s). Sudden and unpredictable interruptions of operation (the so-called trips) typical of such accelerators[
Reference Burgazzi and Pierini116] are also considered, as they can significantly damage the reactor structures and the spallation target, thus also reducing the availability of the plant and consequently its economical convenience. Despite the very high beam stability and availability of modern accelerators (90%), superconducting RF and magnetic technologies are well known to give many tens of sudden interruptions per year (in the millisecond to second range). The tolerable maximum duration of a beam trip is assumed to be 3 s, with the number of trips per year not higher than five. The stability of the beam on the target, in addition, would require an operating range of approximately 1% with respect to energy and current, while it is 10% concerning position and size. The foreseen power of an accelerator for an industrial transmutation machine is of the order of 15–20 MW. In fact, to obtain the required neutron supply of
${10}^{17}$
–
${10}^{18}$
n/s, which is necessary for compensating the subcritical core, beam intensities of up to tens of milliamps are required, corresponding to a power of tens of MW. According to estimates, such an accelerator cost would account for approximately one-quarter of the cost of a plant such as the XT-ADS.
4.3. Industrial applications of the ADS
In medicine, radiotracers[ Reference Hansen and Bender117] and radiopharmaceuticals[ Reference Vermeulen, Vandamme, Bormans and Cleeren118] are widely used in clinical practice as imaging tools for the diagnosis and follow-up of tumour patients. Actually, a key objective here is the integration of the preclinical development of new chemical components with the industrial production of new radiopharmaceuticals, promoting clinical studies, now limited to a small number of radiotracers (e.g., 18F-fluoro-deoxiglucose, FDG), in combination with innovative therapeutic approaches. The development of radiopharmaceuticals is normally established using locally available accelerators to ensure rapid supply and use compatible with short-lived isotopes. Clearly, this application requires small and cost-efficient accelerators to allow affordable and safe[ Reference Poli, Quaglierini, Zega, Pardini, Telleschi, Iervasi and Guiducci119] in situ production and delivery.
Radiation damage research[
Reference Campajola and Di Capua120] (fusion, space) is another field of industrial applications for accelerators. The Fusion Prototypical Neutron Source (FPNS)[
Reference Wiffen121] is a neutron source that would simulate the harsh deuterium–tritium (D-T) fusion environment of a burning fusion device. It will help to build the scientific foundation required to design next-step materials. Although the complete set of the key parameters is still not agreed upon, the neutron source must be capable of delivering 10 displacements per atom (dpa) per year. Some 10 dpa per year can be produced using a 14 MeV neutron with flux of
${10}^{15}$
n/(cm
${}^2\cdot$
s) run per year. The Rotating Target Neutron Source (RTNS-II)[
Reference Petö and Pepelnik122], which operated from 1979 to 1987, produced D-T neutrons and was used for structure material experiments with an estimated flux of
$1.2\times {10}^{13}$
n/(cm
${}^2\cdot$
s). Another machine for radiation studies is the proposed Materials Test Station (MTS) at the LANSCE accelerator at LANL[
Reference Pitcher123] with a peak fast neutron flux greater than
${10}^{15}$
n/(cm
${}^2\cdot$
s). The International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility – Demo Oriented NEutron Source (IFMIF-DONES) is an upcoming neutron production facility that utilizes a 125 mA deuteron beam, accelerated up to 40 MeV impinging on a liquid lithium target to qualify materials to be used in future fusion power reactors[
Reference Ibarra, Arbeiter, Bernardi, Cappelli, García, Heidinger, Krolas, Fischer, Martin-Fuertes, Micciché, Muñoz, Nitti, Pérez, Pinna and Tian124,
Reference Cara, Beauvais, Brañas, Bredy, Carmona, Chel, Comunian, Desmons, Facco, Gastinel, Gex, Gobin, Gournay, Heidinger, Knaster, Maebara, Marroncle, Massaut and Matsumoto125].
4.4. Energy and yield requirements for a neutron source
Fission releases 200 MeV energy and two to three neutrons along with fission products (fragments) and consumes one actinide. Thus, we can estimate the actinide mass consumed and thermal power released for a given neutron rate and a multiplication factor
${k}_{\mathrm{eff}}$
. A single pressure water reactor releases 12 kg of MAs as its waste, assuming 1 GWe year. To completely transmute this amount with a direct neutron (i.e., no multiplication),
${10}^{19}$
n/s is needed. In contrast,
${10}^{17}$
n/s is needed for a system designed with
${k}_{\mathrm{eff}}=0.98$
. Either approach is accompanied by the release of 75
${\mathrm{MW}}$
of power. An analysis of the amount of thermal energy released as a function of the neutron rate is shown in Figure 5 for various multiplication factors.

Figure 5 Actinide mass consumed and thermal power released for a given neutron rate and criticality.
5. Laser–plasma accelerator: a disruptive technology
5.1. Evolution of laser science and technology
The invention of the laser (T. Maiman, 1960; C. H. Townes, Nobel Prize, 1964) has changed the world by controlling the coherence of light. In the following decades two major discoveries have guided the rise of laser science and technologies towards high intensity (petawatt, PW = 1015 W) and very short pulses (femtosecond, fs = 10–15 s), as a new probe, from the infinitely small to infinitely large physical systems. Ultra-intense laser interaction with matter can generate a formidable wave in a plasma that particles can surf along, gaining energy according to the so-called laser wakefield acceleration (LWFA) mechanism proposed by Tajima and Dawson (1979)[
Reference Tajima and Dawson126]. Less than two decades later (1985), the CPA method[
Reference Strickland and Mourou8] was demonstrated by D. Strickland and G. Mourou, who received the Nobel Prize 2018 for this achievement. In CPA, stretching the laser pulses in time is carried out to reduce the peak power, then the pulse is amplified to the desired energy and is finally compressed in time. At the end of the process, when the pulse is focused, extreme light intensity can be achieved. These two discoveries led to the present roadmap of ‘extreme light’ probing matter from the eV atomic regime (1980) to the multi-PW domain, approaching a focused intensity of
${10}^{24}$
W/cm
${}^2$
. At the same time, laser technology and relevant laser–plasma physics are advancing rapidly. Outstanding progress has been made in high-power laser technology in the last decade, with laser peak powers exceeding the PW level[
Reference Lureau, Matras, Chalus, Derycke, Morbieu, Radier, Casagrande, Laux, Ricaud and Rey127–
Reference Gan, Yu, Wang, Liu, Xu, Li, Li, Yu, Wang, Liu, Chen, Peng, Xu, Yao, Zhang, Chen, Tang, Wang, Yin, Liang, Leng, Li and Xu131]. Also, high-repetition-rate systems, that is, 100 Hz and beyond, with moderate peak power, that is, tens of TW and above, are starting to become available, paving the way to new and compact particle accelerators and photon sources.
5.2. Laser electron acceleration and laser requirements
Since the ‘dream beam’ results[ Reference Mangles, Murphy, Najmudin, Thomas, Collier, Dangor, Divall, Foster, Gallacher, Hooker, Jaroszynski, Langley, Mori, Norreys, Tsung, Viskup, Walton and Krushelnick132– Reference Faure, Glinec, Pukhov, Kiselev, Gordienko, Lefebvre, Rousseau, Burgy and Malka134] emerged after the first impressive exploitation of ultra-intense lasers, LPAs have been developing at an unprecedented pace, with the most recent achievement of record electron energy exceeding 10 GeV[ Reference Gonsalves, Nakamura, Daniels, Benedetti, Pieronek, de Raadt, Steinke, Bin, Bulanov, van Tilborg, Geddes, Schroeder, Tóth, Esarey, Swanson, Fan-Chiang, Bagdasarov, Bobrova, Gasilov, Korn, Sasorov and Leemans6], and demonstration of staging[ Reference Foerster, Döpp, Haberstroh, Grafenstein, Campbell, Chang, Corde, Cabadağ, Debus, Gilljohann, Habib, Heinemann, Hidding, Irman, Irshad, Knetsch, Kononenko, de la Ossa, Nutter, Pausch, Schilling, Schletter, Schöbel, Schramm, Travac, Ufer and Karsch135], where the concept of an acceleration module, required for scaling to high energy, was first presented. At the same time, an effort continues to be made in understanding the electron injection process[ Reference Kuschel, Schwab, Yeung, Hollatz, Seidel, Ziegler, Sävert, Kaluza and Zepf136], separated from the wakefield generation and the subsequent acceleration process[ Reference Stragier137]. In fact, a breakthrough in the quality of electron beams is expected from the control of the electron injection to minimize beam emittance and energy spread, two of the most important quality factors of the accelerated bunch. Here several milestones have been achieved using different physical processes, and injection schemes continue to evolve[ Reference Cabadag, Pausch, Schöbel, Buss-mann, Chang, Corde, Debus, Ding, Döpp, Foerster, Gilljohann, Haberstroh, Heinemann, Hidding, Karsch, Koehler, Kononenko, Knetsch, Kurz, de la Ossa, Nutter, Raj, Steiniger, Schramm, Ufer and Irman138, Reference Xu, Bae, Ezzat, Kim, Yang, Lee, Yoon, Sung, Lee, Ji, Shen and Nam139], moving towards an ‘optical engineering’ approach of the process where laser and plasma parameters are fine-tuned using accurate three-dimensional numerical simulations. In view of this, the control over laser and plasma input parameters and their stability is of paramount importance.
In parallel, a major effort is being dedicated to the transport of electron beams[
Reference Cook, Carlsson, Moeller, Nagler and Tzeferacos140] and the generation of secondary radiation through several mechanisms, ranging from the impact of the target for Bremsstrahlung emission[
Reference Pomerantz, McCary, Meadows, Arefiev, Bernstein, Chester, Cortez, Donovan, Dyer, Gaul, Hamilton, Kuk, Lestrade, Wang, Ditmire and Hegelich13,
Reference Giulietti, Bourgeois, Ceccotti, Davoine, Dobosz, D’Oliveira, Galimberti, Galy, Gamucci, Giulietti, Gizzi, Hamilton, Lefebvre, Labate, Marquès, Monot, Popescu, Réau, Sarri, Tomassini and Martin141] and the generation of positrons[
Reference Sugimoto, He, Iwata, Yeh, Tangtartharakul, Arefiev and Sentoku142,
Reference Martinez, Barbosa and Vranic143], to Thomson scattering for
$\gamma$
-ray emission[
Reference Sarri, Corvan, Schumaker, Cole, Di Piazza, Ahmed, Harvey, Keitel, Krushelnick, Mangles, Najmudin, Symes, Thomas, Yeung, Zhao and Zepf144], to the undulator for the generation of X-ray FELs[
Reference Fuchs, Weingartner, Popp, Major, Becker, Osterhoff, Cortrie, Zeitler, Hörlein, Tsakiris, Schramm, Rowlands-Rees, Hooker, Habs, Krausz, Karsch and Grüner145]. From the point of view of transport of accelerated electrons, plasma lenses[
Reference Thaury, Guillaume, Döpp, Lehe, Lifschitz, Phuoc, Gautier, Goddet, Tafzi, Flacco, Tissandier, Sebban, Rousse and Malka146,
Reference Lehe, Thaury, Guillaume, Lifschitz and Malka147] are being studied as powerful, tunable devices capable of cm-scale focal lengths for high-energy beams, thus allowing compactness of LPAs to be preserved, while effectively transporting the electrons from one stage to another.
In the classical picture of LWFA[
Reference Tajima and Dawson126,
Reference Macchi148], a longitudinal electron plasma wave is excited by the ponderomotive force associated with an ultra-short, ultra-intense laser pulse. The electron plasma wave is characterized by a longitudinal electric field and a phase velocity set by the group velocity of the laser pulse,
${v}_{\mathrm{g}}=c\sqrt{1-{\omega}_{\mathrm{p}}^2/{\omega}_{\mathrm{L}}^2}$
, where
${\omega}_{\mathrm{p}}=\sqrt{n_{\mathrm{e}}{e}^2/{\varepsilon}_0{m}_{\mathrm{e}}}$
is the electron plasma frequency, with
${n}_{\mathrm{e}}$
being the electron plasma density,
$e$
,
${m}_{\mathrm{e}}$
and
${\varepsilon}_0$
the electron charge and mass and the dielectric constant, respectively, and
${\omega}_{\mathrm{L}}$
the laser frequency. Electrons in phase with the wave are accelerated until, travelling faster than the electron plasma wave, they overcome the accelerating field of the wave and start experiencing a decelerating field. At high laser intensity, this classical scenario is significantly modified and numerical simulations provide detailed description of plasma wave excitation and evolution as well as electron injection and acceleration[
Reference Rosenzweig149]. The most compact configuration to obtain high-energy electron bunches from laser–plasma interaction is based upon a gas jet of a few millimetres, working in the so-called blowout regime[
Reference Pukhov and Vehn150]. Recently, several mechanisms have been identified and implemented to control the injection of electrons in a well-formed wake wave with the objective to achieve a localized injection of electrons with a limited longitudinal spatial extent, to ensure the reduced energy spread of accelerated electrons. Wave breaking is certainly the most fundamental process leading to the injection of electrons in a plasma wave. While transverse wave breaking[
Reference Bulanov, Pegoraro, Pukhov and Sakharov151] suffers from a delocalized injection of electrons and consequently large energy spread, longitudinal wave breaking via down-ramp[
Reference Tomassini, Galimberti, Giulietti, Giulietti, Gizzi, Labate and Pegoraro152] density-transition certainly provides more localized injection and limited energy spread of electrons. Activation of such injection schemes requires accurate control of the shape and profile of electron distribution, which can be achieved using custom gas targets and plasma tailoring. Recent successful implementations of this principle yielding very localized injection have been demonstrated that rely on plasma lensing[
Reference Gonsalves, Nakamura, Lin, Panasenko, Shiraishi, Sokollik, Benedetti, Schroeder, Geddes, van Tilborg, Osterhoff, Esarey, Toth and Leemans153] and the shock-front in gas jets[
Reference Buck, Wenz, Xu, Khrennikov, Schmid, Heigoldt, Mikhailova, Geissler, Shen, Krausz, Karsch and Veisz154]. Ponderomotive injection[
Reference Umstadter, Kim and Dodd155] also enables a high degree of control on the exact location of injection, but requires significantly more complex experimental configurations with additional laser pulses. A conceptually simple technique to enhance electron injection is the so-called ionization injection[
Reference Chen, Sheng, Ma and Zhang156], in which field ionization properties of some gases are exploited to increase the electron density in the bubble. Recent advances of this scheme also enable control of the spatial distribution of the ionization injection and consequent smaller energy spread. In the two-colour ionization injection[
Reference Yu, Esarey, Schroeder, Vay, Benedetti, Geddes, Chen and Leemans157] two laser pulses are used. The main pulse has a long wavelength and a large normalized amplitude. The second pulse, the ionization pulse, is a shorter wavelength, typically a frequency doubled, 400 nm Ti:sapphire (Ti:Sa) pulse. While the main pulse cannot further ionize the electrons in the external shells of the large Z dopant due to its large wavelength, the electric field of the ionization pulse is large enough to generate newborn electrons that will be trapped in the bucket. This opens up the possibility of using gas species with relatively low ionization potentials, thus enabling separation of wake excitation from particle extraction and trapping. A significant development of this concept has been proposed recently[
Reference Tomassini, De Nicola, Labate, Londrillo, Fedele, Terzani and Gizzi158,
Reference Tomassini, Terzani, Labate, Toci, Chance, Nghiem and Gizzi159] in the context of the EuPRAXIA project, in which ionization injection occurs in a large-amplitude plasma wave driven by a train of resonant ultra-short pulses. In this so-called resonant multi-pulse ionization injection scheme, the main portion of a single ultra-short laser system pulse is temporally shaped as a sequence of resonant sub-pulses, while a minor portion acts as the ionizing pulse. Simulations show that high-quality electron bunches with normalized emittance as low as 0.08 mm
$\cdot$
mrad and 0.65% energy spread can be obtained with a single present-day 100-TW-class Ti:Sa laser system.
In another form of intense laser acceleration of electrons, known as direct laser acceleration (DLA), plasmas of near-critical densities are used as targets. In this case, the plasma frequency is too high to form wakefield structures, and the electrons that are pushed outward by the ponderomotive force leave behind a channel of positively charged ions and quasistatic electric and magnetic fields. Although these fields are weaker than the laser field, they significantly affect the behaviour of electrons in the channel. The equation of motion of these electrons is analogous to that of a driven oscillator[ Reference Arefiev, Khudik and Schollmeier160], implying a resonant behaviour. The two frequencies to consider are that of electron oscillations under the quasistatic fields of the channel, and that of the electron motion under the laser field. At sufficiently high plasma densities, the frequencies become comparable, resulting in the channel field having a greater effect on the phase of the transverse oscillations and causing their amplitudes to increase. Under this resonance condition, the channel fields rotate the transverse momentum into longitudinal momentum in each oscillation of the laser field. This yields electron energies higher than those that an electron would acquire by interacting with the laser field in vacuum[ Reference Arefiev, Khudik and Schollmeier160– Reference Gong, Mackenroth, Wang, Yan, Toncian and Arefiev163]. DLA of electrons has been observed experimentally for over a quarter of a century[ Reference Pomerantz, McCary, Meadows, Arefiev, Bernstein, Chester, Cortez, Donovan, Dyer, Gaul, Hamilton, Kuk, Lestrade, Wang, Ditmire and Hegelich13, Reference Malka, Lefebvre and Miquel164– Reference Cohen, Meir, Tangtartharakul, Perelmutter, Elkind, Gershuni, Levanon, Arefiev and Pomerantz172]. Plasmas of near-critical density appropriate for DLA may be formed using gas jet systems, which are simple to operate with up to kHz rates[ Reference Powell, Payeur, Fourmaux, Ibrahim, Kieffer, MacLean and Légaré171], but their material selection is limited, or by using low-density polymer foam targets[ Reference Willingale, Arefiev, Williams, Chen, Dollar, Hazi, Maksimchuk, Manuel, Marley, Nazarov, Zhao and Zulick173, Reference Willingale, Nagel, Thomas, Bellei, Clarke, Dangor, Heathcote, Kaluza, Kamperidis, Kneip, Krushelnick, Lopes, Mangles, Nazarov, Nilson and Najmudin174]. Alternatively, plasma plumes may be formed by pre-exploding a solid foil using a pre-pulse, allowing an expansion time of the order of nanoseconds before irradiation with the main pulse[ Reference Pomerantz, McCary, Meadows, Arefiev, Bernstein, Chester, Cortez, Donovan, Dyer, Gaul, Hamilton, Kuk, Lestrade, Wang, Ditmire and Hegelich13, Reference Cohen, Meir, Tangtartharakul, Perelmutter, Elkind, Gershuni, Levanon, Arefiev and Pomerantz172, Reference Gizzi, Giulietti, Giulietti, Audebert, Bastiani, Geindre and Mysyrowicz175, Reference Giulietti, Galimberti, Giulietti, Gizzi, Borghesi, Balcou, Rousse and Rousseau176]. The energy spectrum of DLA electrons typically follows a Boltzmann-like distribution with an effective temperature in the MeV range, which scales as the square root of the laser intensity[ Reference Pukhov, Sheng and Meyer-ter-Vehn177]. While DLA may be less attractive than LWFA for certain applications due to its continuous spectrum and lower energies, it does have a notable advantage in terms of extremely high conversion efficiency of the incident laser energy to relativistic electrons, which can be as high as 23%[ Reference Rosmej, Gyrdymov, Günther, Andreev, Tavana, Neumayer, Zähter, Zahn, Popov, Borisenko, Kantsyrev, Skobliakov, Panyushkin, Bogdanov, Consoli, Shen and Pukhov178], making it an ideal choice for photo-neutron generation.
In view of the fine control of electron acceleration highlighted above, a new perspective for compact, all-laser-driven X-ray and
$\gamma$
-ray sources is emerging rapidly[
Reference Yi, Pukhov, Luu-Thanh and Shen179,
Reference Feng, Qin, Geng, Yu, Wang, Wu, Yan, Ji and Shen180], aiming at a brightness currently achievable only at large-scale facilities such as synchrotron radiation facilities. Bremsstrahlung or fluorescence emission driven by fast electron generation in laser interaction with solids was demonstrated to provide effective ultra-short X-ray and neutron emission with unique properties[
Reference Pomerantz, McCary, Meadows, Arefiev, Bernstein, Chester, Cortez, Donovan, Dyer, Gaul, Hamilton, Kuk, Lestrade, Wang, Ditmire and Hegelich13,
Reference Lemos, Albert, Shaw, Papp, Polanek, King, Milder, Marsh, Pak, Pollock, Hegelich, Moody, Park, Tommasini, Williams, Chen and Joshi181,
Reference Gizzi, Koester, Labate and Levato182]. On the other hand, laser–plasma electron acceleration is being considered in place of conventional RF electron accelerators for a variety of radiation emission mechanisms. Broadband radiation generation schemes, including betatron and Bremsstrahlung, are being developed while Thomson scattering by collision with a synchronized laser pulse is being proposed for the generation of narrower band radiation. Moreover, with the increasing quality of laser-driven electron bunches that led recently to the demonstration of FEL emission[
Reference Wang, Feng, Ke, Yu, Xu, Qi, Chen, Qin, Zhang, Fang, Liu, Jiang, Wang, Wang, Yang, Wu, Leng, Liu and Li183] and the expected availability of high-repetition-rate laser drivers[
Reference Gizzi, Koester, Labate, Mathieu, Mazzotta, Toci and Vannini184], X-ray FEL facilities are also being designed[
Reference Assmann, Weikum, Akhter, Alesini, Alexandrova, Anania, Andreev, Andriyash, Artioli and Aschikhin29,
Reference Walker, Alesini, Alexandrova, Anania, Andreev, Andriyash, Aschikhin, Assmann, Audet and Bacci185].
Many of these sources and beamlines have been demonstrated in the laboratory environment and are now progressing towards implementation for industrial and medical applications. In the context of LWFA, given the ever increasing level of control and reliability of available schemes, compact, laser-driven accelerators are being explored for radiotherapy and diagnostics applications in areas where electron beams with energy of several tens of MeV up to a few 100 MeV, in the so-called very high energy electron (VHEE) range, are normally used as primary beams[ Reference Labate, Palla, Panetta, Avella, Baffigi, Brandi, Di Martino, Fulgentini, Giulietti, Köster, Terzani, Tomassini, Traino and Gizzi186]. A laser-driven electron accelerator may have several advantages compared to conventional LINACs, ranging from the small size of the acceleration region, to the possibility of multiplexing the electron source using a single laser driver. From the point of view of the specific properties of laser-accelerated electrons, given the ultra-short duration of laser-accelerated bunches compared to conventional RF LINACs, a new regime of ultrafast radiation biology is emerging[ Reference Gauduel187], which recently culminated in the identification of the so-called FLASH effect[ Reference Favaudon, Caplier, Monceau, Pouzoulet, Sayarath, Fouillade, Poupon, Brito, Hupé, Bourhis, Hall, Fontaine and Vozenin188] and related radiotherapy applications[ Reference Borghini, Labate, Piccinini, Panaino, Andreassi and Gizzi189].
5.3. Ion accelerating schemes and laser requirements
Ion acceleration can be driven by the laser–plasma interaction at a relativistic focused laser intensity of the order of
${10}^{18}$
W/cm
${}^2$
or above. The most established mechanism for ion acceleration is so-called target normal sheath acceleration (TNSA)[
Reference Snavely, Key, Hatchett, Cowan, Roth, Phillips, Stoyer, Henry, Sangster, Singh, Wilks, MacKinnon, Offenberger, Pennington, Yasuike, Langdon, Lasinski, Johnson, Perry and Campbell190] in which the laser interacts with a thin foil target. The accelerated ions are emitted in the direction normal to the surface of the target regardless of the laser angle of incidence, because the accelerating fields are produced by the space charge separation within the target set by escaping fast electrons. Accelerated nucleons are dominated by contaminants on the surface of the target. The process leads to a broad ion spectrum and the efficiency of the process relative to the pulse intensity scaled as approximately
$\sqrt{I}$
[
Reference Keppler, Elkina, Becker, Hein, Hornung, Mäusezahl, Rödel, Tamer, Zepf and Kaluza191,
Reference Wilks, Kruer, Tabak and Langdon192]. The maximum proton cutoff energy achievable with the peak power of the PW scale is typically of the order of
$50{-}75$
MeV[
Reference Keppler, Elkina, Becker, Hein, Hornung, Mäusezahl, Rödel, Tamer, Zepf and Kaluza191], but several techniques have been proposed concerning laser and target configurations to improve laser coupling[
Reference Torrisi, Calcagno, Giulietti, Cutroneo, bone and Skala193–
Reference Gizzi, Boella, Labate, Baffigi, Bilbao, Brandi, Cristoforetti, Fazzi, Fulgentini, Giove, Koester, Palla and Tomassini195], beam quality[
Reference Huang, Albright, Yin, Wu, Bowers, Hegelich and Fernández196] and/or ion numbers.
Another ion acceleration mechanism, so-called radiation pressure acceleration (RPA)[
Reference Robinson, Zepf, Kar, Evans and Bellei197], promises improved cutoff energies and higher laser-to-ion conversion efficiencies, but is less accessible experimentally due to more demanding laser and target requirements. The optimum target foil thickness is defined by the intensity of the laser and the density of the target material, but it is typically on the nm-scale. The high-intensity laser pulse is incident normal to the target foil with circular polarization and relies on the radiation pressure acting on the electrons of the target plasma; it pushes through the back surface and accelerates the irradiated film portion. The field uniformly accelerates the target ions, thus leading to a nearly mono-energetic ion spectrum in ideal simulation cases. In addition, the acceleration process is efficient and scales favourably with the energy of the laser pulse (
$\sim I$
). To date, the maximum cutoff energy reported is 93 MeV[
Reference Kim, Pae, Choi, Lee, Kim, Singhal, Sung, Lee, Lee, Nickles, Jeong, Kim and Nam198], but simulations point towards the capability of reaching several hundred MeV energies[
Reference Wu, Gong, Shou, Tang, Yu, Mourou and Yan199,
Reference Chou, Grassi, Glenzer and Fiuza200] (see Figure 6(a)). The prediction for the ideal case with a pulse duration of a few cycles leads to maximum efficiency and reduced beam instabilities. While few experimental studies of RPA have been reported to date, it is expected that with the new generation of intense laser facilities coming online new results are likely to emerge in the near future. Owing to the nature of real-world laser conditions, primarily finite contrast level, but also limited polarizations, most RPA demonstrations are likely to be hybrid results with the TNSA mechanism producing lower-energy background ions[
Reference Ter-Avetisyan, Varmazyar, Singh, Son, Fule, Bychenkov, Farkas, Nelissen, Mondal, Papp, Börzsönyi, Csontos, Lécz, Somoskői, Tóth, Tóth, Andriy, Margarone, Necas, Mourou, Szabó and Osvay201], as shown in Figure 6(b), with RPA or similar mechanisms contributing the higher-energy component. In fact, recent measurements confirm this scenario with the observation of record energies up to 150 MeV[
Reference Ziegler, Göthel, Assenbaum, Bernert, Brack, Cowan, Dover, Gaus, Kluge, Kraft, Kroll, Metzkes-Ng, Nishiuchi, Prencipe, Püschel, Rehwald, Reimold, Schlenvoigt, Umlandt, Vescovi, Schramm and Zeil202].

Figure 6 Advanced numerical simulation results of highest-energy RPA proton acceleration against experimental results. (a) RPA simulations[ Reference Chou, Grassi, Glenzer and Fiuza200]. (b) Hybrid RPA results[ Reference Higginson, Gray, King, Dance, Williamson, Butler, Wilson, Capdessus, Armstrong, Green, Hawkes, Martin, Wei, Mirfayzi, Yuan, Kar, Borghesi, Clarke, Neely and McKenna203].
5.4. Targets for laser-driven proton acceleration
In order to efficiently accelerate ions with lasers, the laser pulse needs to interact with a high-density target material – practically solid-state[ Reference Maksimchuk, Gu, Flippo, Umstadter and Bychenkov204, Reference Morrison, Feister, Frische, Austin, Ngirmang, Murphy, Orban, Chowdhury and Roquemore205] or ultrahigh-pressure gas[ Reference Puyuelo-Valdes, Henares, Hannachi, Ceccotti, Domange, Ehret, d’Humieres, Lancia, Marquès, Ribeyre, Santos, Tikhonchuk and Tarisien206, Reference Ospina-Bohórquez, Debayle, Santos, Volpe and Gremillet207]. In single-shot mode, all options are viable and have been demonstrated. Moreover, various complex targets (multilayer, foam, nanotube, etc.)[ Reference Yazdani, Sadighi-Bonabi, Afarideh, Yazdanpanah and Hora208] have also been suggested and partially tested, to enhance laser-to-ion efficiency and/or shape the spectra of the accelerated ions. Beyond single-shot mode, however, the choice of targets is limited. The debris originating from the interaction with a solid-state material contaminates the surrounding optics. Although solutions exist to protect the optics (i.e., transparent foils), considerable engineering is needed to keep these protections transparent over several hours of operation at high repetition rate. Such foils may also degrade the focusability of the laser beam, making additional wave front correction necessary. When dealing with large-size optics and vacuum conditions, the challenge is significant.
There are targets that are inherently debris-free and offer multiple-shot/rep-rated operation. These are liquid jets, cryo-cooled water or heavy-water ribbons and ultrahigh-pressure gas jets. The operation of a liquid jet can degrade the vacuum level in the chamber, even at the recently accepted relatively higher value of
${10}^{-3}$
mbar[
Reference Treffert, Glenn, Chou, Crissman, Curry, DePonte, Fiuza, Hartley, Ofori-Okai, Roth, Glenzer and Gauthier209]. The liquid jet vapour can be efficiently removed with cold fingers[
Reference Füle, Kovács, Gilinger, Karnok, Gaál, Figul, Marowsky and Osvay210]. However, careful engineering is needed – again – to avoid icing while keeping the system operational. The demonstrated repetition rate is of the order of 1 kHz, defined by the thickness of the jet, the flow rate and the interaction area[
Reference Morrison, Feister, Frische, Austin, Ngirmang, Murphy, Orban, Chowdhury and Roquemore205,
Reference Füle, Kovács, Gilinger, Karnok, Gaál, Figul, Marowsky and Osvay210]. The use of cryo ribbons[
Reference Obst, Göde, Rehwald, Brack, Branco, Bock, Bussmann, Cowan, Curry, Fiuza, Gauthier, Gebhardt, Helbig, Huebl, Hübner, Irman, Kazak, Kim, Kluge, Kraft, Loeser, Metzkes, Mishra, Rödel, Schlenvoigt, Siebold, Tiggesbäumker, Wolter, Ziegler, Schramm, Glenzer and Zeil211] is similar, with the addition that the cryo technology itself is quite bulky, complicated and causes vibration that is difficult to isolate within the interaction chamber.
The repetition rate of high-pressure gas jets is limited to around 100 Hz, mainly for technological reasons. In order to keep the pressure high (i.e., ensure the required density) in the vacuum chamber, the laser needs to be focused close to the nozzle. This close proximity degrades the nozzle, which therefore needs to be changed frequently, assuming continuous operation. Unlike single-shot solid-state(-like) targets, no efforts are known to make a complex target from any of the above technologies that are capable of multi-shot operation. Hence, further technologies need to be explored to enhance the laser-to-ion conversion efficiencies, such as post-acceleration or multi-jet operation. Although fundamental principles do not limit this technology, a proper cost–benefit analysis is necessary before adopting any of these target options.
5.5. RF and laser accelerators
Based on the current state-of-the-art accelerators, we can summarize the following. The most advanced superconducting RF technology is potentially capable of reaching the required specifications but with inherent difficulty related to the long construction times, especially for the case of proton beams with respect to electron beams. At the same time, producing relativistic protons and heavy-ion beams by RF accelerator technology is very demanding in terms of accelerating structures, real estate and money.
Indeed, the LPA is a ‘disruptive technology’ that is enabling new physics at the interface of atoms[
Reference Pikuz, Faenov, Colgan, Dance, Abdallah, Wagenaars, Booth, Culfa, Evans, Gray, Kaempfer, Lancaster, McKenna, Rossall, Skobelev, Schulze, Uschmann, Zhidkov and Woolsey212], plasma, quantum electrodynamics (QED) at the extremes[
Reference Jirka, Klimo, Vranic, Weber and Korn213] and nuclear physics[
Reference Zamfir214] while becoming off the shelf for many societal applications[
Reference Margarone, Cirrone, Cuttone, Amico, Andò, Borghesi, Bulanov, Bulanov, Chatain, Fajstavr, Giuffrida, Grepl, Kar, Krasa, Kramer, Larosa, Leanza, Levato, Maggiore, Manti, Milluzzo, Odlozilik, Olsovcova, Perin, Pipek, Psikal, Petringa, Ridky, Romano, Rus, Russo, Schillaci, Scuderi, Velyhan, Versaci, Wiste, Zakova and Korn215]. With adequate focusing, PW lasers can generate peak electric fields of the order of
${10}^{12}$
V/cm with relatively efficient conversion to relativistic electrons and photons with energies in excess of tens of GeV and protons and ions to hundreds of MeV within a few micrometres. Given the potential for energetic laser-driven particles, we can now consider experiments in laser laboratories that so far have been possible only with conventional nuclear accelerators and reactors. Plus, the significant reduction in size (currently the SLAC 50 GeV LINAC is 3 km long), ground dimensions (now km
${}^2$
) and cost (billions of euros for RF technologies) can potentially be achieved by order of magnitude in some cases, particularly for high-energy machines.
Although emerging laser-driven technologies are very promising in terms of cost, size and available parameter range, the vast majority of experiments have been performed in laboratories where the operation of the laser system was not designed for nuclear facility counterparts. The cross-over of the gap between the laboratory and facility-based experiments was identified in Europe as a major step forward. For this to happen, high-power laser drivers will have to overcome two main limitations, namely the wall-plug efficiency and the repetition rate at high energy per pulse. At the same time, progress is expected in the acceleration regimes, understanding the specificity of many regimes and optimizing target properties versus achievable laser architectures and specifications that have the potential for scalability.
6. Assessment of laser-driven neutron energy and yield
Nuclear reactors and accelerator-driven neutrons are the most powerful neutron sources currently in existence. Nuclear reactors generate high neutron fluxes with a broad energy spectrum (up to
$\sim 10$
MeV, known as the Watt fission spectrum[
Reference Watt216]) and must maintain criticality
$k=1$
. In accelerator-driven systems, the generated neutron spectra can be quasi mono-energetic (via fusion) or close to the Watt fission spectrum in the case of photo-neutron generation, or up to the incident proton energy for a spallation.
Nuclear reactors generate neutrons directly within the reactor core, while ADSs require an intermediate step. This step could be ion acceleration for fusion or spallation, or alternatively electron acceleration for photo-neutron generation. The ion acceleration method is called the pitcher–catcher configuration, where the accelerator pitches a particle that is converted to a neutron in the catcher. In the case of photo-neutron generation, a two-step process is required: firstly, the accelerated electrons are converted to
$\gamma$
-rays via the Bremsstrahlung process, after which the
$\gamma$
-ray interacts with a nucleus via the
$\gamma$
–n reaction to produce neutrons through the giant dipole resonance process.
Since these procedures rely on at least two steps, it is critical to assess the entire process from the point of view of conversion efficiency from the driver (laser) pulse energy to the energy of the neutron bunch. Such conversion efficiency, based on physical rules, sets an ultimate upper limit for the efficiency of the entire neutron generation procedure. It is worth emphasizing that this conversion efficiency is independent of the efficiency of the lasers and is determined by the cross-sections of nuclear physics reaction processes. The elementary processes of neutron generation known are shown in Table 2, along with the particle beam power required for the generation of
${10}^{15}$
n/s, necessary for the driving of a subcritical transmutator reactor under the condition of
$k\ge 0.97$
.
Table 2 Major characteristics of the elementary neutron generation processes via the ADS.

Note: D-D, deuterium–deuterium.
Whereas conventional accelerators provide particle beams with narrow band energy spectra, laser accelerators usually exhibit considerably broader energy spectra. Notably, the low-energy part of the spectra can be several orders of magnitude stronger than the high-energy one. Hence, it is worth considering in more detail the properties of neutron beams generated so far by lasers. What follows includes both experimental results and theoretical predictions.
6.1. Fusion (and neutron stripping/knock out)
The ions accelerated are mostly protons and deuterons. For protons, all charge exchange processes require proton energy well above a few MeV to generate fast neutrons with exemplary reactions Be(p,n), Li(p,n) having a threshold energy of 2 MeV (Figure 7(a)). Proton knockout (p, xn) processes have large cross-sections at much higher energies (tens of MeV), while the optimum of spallation neutrons is obtained from protons with more than 500 MeV. For deuterons, the exemplary reactions D(d,n), T(d,n) do not have a physical threshold. The T(d,n) reaction has the largest cross-section around 140 keV, while the D(d,n) reaction reaches similar efficiency (yield) for deuterons with a kinetic energy level around 5 MeV (Figure 7(b)). All the experimental results and most of the predictions reveal that the most efficient, ion-based neutron generation can be achieved with hundreds of femtosecond, high-energy lasers. The demonstrated highest conversion efficiency per shot is
$6.9\times {10}^8$
n/J with a sub-ps, 100 TW laser[
Reference Günther, Rosmej, Tavana, Gyrdymov, Skobliakov, Kantsyrev, Zähter, Borisenko, Pukhov and Andreev169], while it is almost two magnitudes lower for a 40 fs, 30 TW laser[
Reference Zulick, Dollar, Chvykov, Davis, Kalinchenko, Maksimchuk, Petrov, Raymond, Thomas, Willingale, Yanovsky and Krushelnick217] (Table 3).

Figure 7 Neutron yield versus the initiating ion energy for stripping (a) and fusion (b) (D-D and D-T) interactions. Panel (a) is adapted from Ref. [Reference Zimmer218]. Results in (b) are calculated in the same manner as in Ref. [Reference Tajima, Necas, Mourou, Gales and Leroy26]. Note: D-D, deuterium–deuterium.
Table 3 State-of-the art of neutron generation with lasers for the three major processes, neutron stripping/knock on (first ten rows), photo-neutrons (next four rows) and spallation (last two rows). Only the best results are shown here per process, in terms of neutron number per laser pulse energy. For comparison, the required average power of lasers that would be necessary to achieve
${10}^{15}$
n/ s is also shown, assuming that all the targetry issues are solved. Remark: all the values are taken from peer-reviewed papers (references available). The laser energy on target was taken as the reported energy reaching the primary target, regardless of the focal spot qualities. Hence, the values of neutron number per laser energy are conservative by a factor of 2–5.

The prediction for the highest average power neutron source based on the demonstrated yield, taking into account the state-of-the-art parameters of the lasers, and assuming solutions for the high-repetition-rate target parts, is approximately
$6\times {10}^{10}$
(n/s)/kW (kHz, few-cycle laser, using the T(d,n) reaction). The high efficiency of particle acceleration with a few-cycle laser is yet to be demonstrated. R&D activities are needed towards (i) generation of spectrally shaped (quasi-monochromatic) protons or deuterons and (ii) enhancement of the efficiency of ion generation (via novel interactions and/or target structures).
6.2. Photonuclear process
Photo-neutron generation is a two-step process: laser-accelerated electrons generate gamma rays that subsequently interact with a nucleus to eject neutrons. The phenomenon of laser acceleration of electrons has been studied both theoretically and experimentally for over four decades. However, only a few groups have studied the laser electron acceleration and subsequent generation of gamma rays and neutrons[
Reference Giulietti, Bourgeois, Ceccotti, Davoine, Dobosz, D’Oliveira, Galimberti, Galy, Gamucci, Giulietti, Gizzi, Hamilton, Lefebvre, Labate, Marquès, Monot, Popescu, Réau, Sarri, Tomassini and Martin141,
Reference Günther, Rosmej, Tavana, Gyrdymov, Skobliakov, Kantsyrev, Zähter, Borisenko, Pukhov and Andreev169,
Reference Cohen, Meir, Tangtartharakul, Perelmutter, Elkind, Gershuni, Levanon, Arefiev and Pomerantz172,
Reference Rosmej, Gyrdymov, Günther, Andreev, Tavana, Neumayer, Zähter, Zahn, Popov, Borisenko, Kantsyrev, Skobliakov, Panyushkin, Bogdanov, Consoli, Shen and Pukhov178,
Reference Pomerantz, McCary, Meadows, Arefiev, Bernstein, Chester, Cortez, Donovan, Dyer, Gaul, Hamilton, Kuk, Lestrade, Wang, Ditmire and Hegelich219]. Since photo-neutron generation is a resonant reaction, that is, the cross-section has a peak around 14 MeV of gamma photons, only electrons in excess of 20 MeV will generate gamma rays with sufficient energy (Figure 8(a)). According to numerical simulations, the neutron yield is linearly proportional to the electron energy above 50 MeV (Figure 8(b)). The demonstrated highest conversion efficiency per shot is approximately
$1.5\times {10}^8$
n/J with a sub-ps 100 TW laser, while it is three orders of magnitude lower for a 45 fs 60 TW laser[
Reference Li, Feng, Wang, Tan, Ge, Liu, Yan, Zhang, Fu and Chen220]. It is worth mentioning that the so far only multiple-shot photo-neutron generation[
Reference Feng, Fu, Li, Zhang, Wang, Li, Zhu, Tan, Mirzaie, Zhang and Chen221] was demonstrated by this laser, too. We stress that the prediction for the highest average power neutron source based on the theoretical calculations, taking into account the state-of-the-art parameters of the lasers, and assuming solutions for the high-repetition-rate target, is
$6\times {10}^{11}$
(n/s)/kW (kHz few-cycle laser). We observe here that the gap between the theoretical prediction and the so-far experimentally demonstrated yield per kW average power is five orders of magnitude. R&D directions to advance further are (i) experimental demonstration of the predicted high efficiency with few-cycle pulses; (ii) optimization of the laser-generated electron energy spectrum to the resonance.

Figure 8 Cross-section of neutron generation in two isotopes of Pb in the function of gamma photon energy (a) and simulation of neutron yield per electron for various electron energies (b). Panel (a) is adapted from Ref. [Reference Essabaa, Arianer, Ausset, Bajeat, Baronick, Clapier, Coacolo, Donzaud, Ducourtieux, Galès, Gardès, Grialou, Hosni, Guillemaud-Mueller, Ibrahim, Junquera, Lau, Le Blanc, Lefort, Le Scornet, Lesrel, Mueller, Obert, Perru, Potier, Proust, Pougheon, Roussière, Rouvière, Sauvage, Sorlin, Tkatchenko, Verney, Waast, Rinolfi, Rossat, Forkel-Wirth, Muller, Bienvenu, Bourdon, Garvey, Jacquemard and Omeich222].
6.3. Spallation
Spallation requires the minimum kinetic energy of the protons to exceed 250 MeV. It is an attractive neutron source with a very high neutron yield for protons with energy greater than 600 MeV (Figure 9). So far, no laser-driven experimental setup has been capable of reaching this energy level – as discussed above, the state-of-the-art of laser-driven proton acceleration energy is approximately
$100$
MeV[
Reference Higginson, Gray, King, Dance, Williamson, Butler, Wilson, Capdessus, Armstrong, Green, Hawkes, Martin, Wei, Mirfayzi, Yuan, Kar, Borghesi, Clarke, Neely and McKenna223]. The predictions for the highest average power neutron source based on the theoretical calculations, taking into account the state-of-the-art parameters of the lasers, and assuming solutions for the high-repetition-rate target parts, are approximately
$1.2\times {10}^{10}$
(n/s)/kW for a 10 Hz, half-PW laser and approximately
$4.3\times {10}^{12}$
(n/s)/kW for a 10 PW (1 shot/min) laser. Major ways to advance R&D further include (i) enhancement of the energy of the laser-accelerated protons with higher peak intensity and/or multiple stage accelerators and/or post-acceleration; (ii) an experimental demonstration of a laser-based neutron spallation source.

Figure 9 Neutron yield versus proton energy (a) using Monte-Carlo N-particle simulation. (b) Experimental results from the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) cyclotron. The simulation agrees well with the experimental values up to 1 GeV proton energies. Adapted from Ref. [Reference Amirkhani, Hassanzadeh and Safari224].
6.4. Towards laser-driven neutron sources for an LDADS
Among the three major mechanisms of laser accelerator generated neutrons presented here, spallation provides the highest yield per inducing particle. This could be a multiplicity of ten or more, depending on the proton energy. However, the usual spectra of laser-generated protons decrease exponentially towards high proton energies. Hence, the – simulated – conversion efficiency is less than 1. Moreover, the required minimum proton energy is yet to be demonstrated, as the necessary ultrahigh peak intensity laser is still years away from being built. In contrast, both fusion (stripping) and photonuclear processes in various arrangements have been studied experimentally with existing lasers of various parameters, although they offer a multiplication factor well below 1. Fusion requires laser acceleration of deuterons only to 140 keV, resulting in a modest peak yield of
${10}^{-5}$
n/D. For stripping, protons need to be accelerated to 10s of MeV, with a yield up to 0.2 n/p. However, the photo-neutron yield can be as high as 0.05 n/e for 180 MeV electrons. Efficient ion acceleration with lasers requires high-density targets, such as solid-state, liquid or ultrahigh-pressure gas jets – the latter is still to be demonstrated. Upon interaction, a large amount of debris is generated, which contaminates the optics, the vacuum components, etc. No standard solution has yet been found to overcome this problem. Hence, the only viable option currently consists of the use of liquid jets (or ultrahigh-pressure gas jets). Moreover, the laser pulse has to be very clean temporally (very high contrast). The production of such a high temporal contrast laser pulse at the required repetition rate (average power) poses a challenge on its own. With respect to electron acceleration, it works very well in gas jets or gas cells at modest pressure. The requirements of the necessary laser pulse parameters are much more relaxed, too. However, systematic experimental studies are needed to validate the ambitious theoretical prediction of laser-based photo-neutron generation with a few-cycle laser. A summary of the main key features of state-of-the-art laser neutron generation follows.
-
• Laser-driven spallation is the highest-gain and the highest-risk approach. Once multi-10 PW peak power, rep-rated laser technology is demonstrated, this would require a quarter of a MW average laser power for the production of
${10}^{15}$
neutrons in a second. Taking into account the main HW components needed and the maturity of the acceleration mechanism, this approach has a technology readiness level (TRL) ranging from 2 to 3 (model-based validation). -
• Fusion (or stripping) is the most studied and experimentally known procedure, offering fewer surprises. According to the already demonstrated production rates, the necessary average power of the laser systems would be a few MW. This approach has a TRL ranging from 4 to 5 (test in controlled environment).
-
• Photo-neutron generation is the easiest route, from a target engineering point of view, but it is not free from experimental risks. Here, the required average power is in the region of 10 MW. This approach has a TRL ranging from 4 to 5 (test in controlled environment).
Further studies on the generation processes may decrease the necessary laser average power by an order of magnitude, either through the optimization of the particle spectrum that generates the neutrons or by increasing the coupling efficiency of the laser–matter interaction. However, it is clear that lasers are the primary enabling technology for all these approaches to neutron generation. In the following section an overview of the current status of high-power, ultra-short pulse laser technology will be given, with the aim to identify possible candidate systems and scalable architectures for future industrial development.
7. Laser drivers for particle accelerators
Over the past 15 years, a significant number of ultra-intense laser facilities have been constructed worldwide (see Figure 10 from ICUIL) based on a variety of laser architectures[ Reference Danson, Haefner, Bromage, Butcher, Chanteloup, Chowdhury, Galvanauskas, Gizzi, Hein, Hillier, Hopps, Kato, Khazanov, Kodama, Korn, Li, Li, Limpert, Ma, Nam, Neely, Papadopoulos, Penman, Qian, Rocca, Shaykin, Siders, Spindloe, Szatmári, Trines, Zhu, Zhu and Zuegel233]. PW-class lasers used at these international laboratories and facilities in the field of laser-driven accelerators and related fields are mainly delivered by the laser industry, with custom systems developed by a handful of research labs engaged in laser R&D. Indeed, more recently, a number of sites are emerging where such laser technology is combined with light sources and accelerator facilities to enable combined use of all these facilities for frontier science and technology[ Reference Jacquemot, Weeks and Biegert234]. These have been operated, or will be operational soon, in a wide range of fields not only for laser-particle acceleration or high-field applications, but also for a wide range of industrial uses of lasers and laser-driven secondary radiation sources and X-ray FELs. In fact, several promising schemes for LWFA have emerged that predict particle beams at repetition rates of the order of 100 Hz[ Reference Gizzi, Koester, Labate, Mathieu, Mazzotta, Toci and Vannini184] with GeV energy, pC or higher charge per pulse, low energy spread and low emittance parameters, which are essential[ Reference Nghiem, Alesini, Aschikhin, Assmann, Audet, Beck, Chance, Chen, Chiadroni and Cianchi235] to meet the demands of real-world applications. From these and other recent studies[ Reference Albert, Couprie, Debus, Downer, Faure, Flacco, Gizzi, Grismayer, Huebl, Joshi, Labat, P. Leemans, R. Maier, Mangles, Mason, Mathieu, Muggli, Nishiuchi, Osterhoff, Rajeev, Schramm, Schreiber, Thomas, Vay, Vranic and Zeil27] it is clear, however, that LPAs are currently limited by the repetition rates of commercially available laser drivers, typically 10 Hz or below for 100-TW-scale peak power and, ultimately, by average power.

Figure 10 Ultra-intense laser facilities constructed worldwide[ 232].
The pulse repetition rate, and thus the average power, need to be increased for exploitation at user facilities, laser-based industry and space applications. The current average power of PW-level peak intensity lasers is at
$\approx 100$
W, which will have to be increased significantly to ensure a repetition rate of kilohertz and beyond, as required by the foreseen applications. Depending on the single-shot peak power and pulse energy required for the specific acceleration regime, average power from kW to hundreds of kW may be required for each accelerator module.
Moreover, attention is being given to laser quality factors. Experimental results and theoretical modelling show a good understanding of laser-driven phenomena and have highlighted the important role of relevant laser parameters to maintain effective and reproducible particle acceleration, particularly, the stability of laser intensity on target, the quality of the focal spot profile and the beam pointing stability. Many challenges remain with improvements in the quality of laser-driven plasma-based particle beams and repeatability of laser performance needed to meet the requirements of accelerator applications.
In this specific context of neutron generation, significant differences in the laser architecture may arise depending on the selected neutron production mechanism. As discussed above, in the case of photonuclear/photo-fission-based neutron production, electron beam energy ranging from 10 to 100 MeV may be required, relaxing the requirement on pulse energy/peak power, perhaps to a few TW peak power and approximately kW average power for each module. A full plant will require a large number of such individual modules and the wall-plug efficiency of each module will eventually become the limiting factor. For this reason, the laser architecture will have to be established starting from these considerations and taking into account the growth of this specific segment of laser technology, regardless of this specific application.
We highlight that the ultrafast laser market was valued 1.6 billion dollars in 2021, and is expected to reach 4 billion dollars by 2027, with an estimated CAGR (compound annual growth rate) of 16.7% between 2021 and 2027. Ultrafast or ultra-short pulse lasers are critical manufacturing tools across industries such as automobiles, consumer electronics and medical devices because of advantages such as tighter tolerances, enhanced dimensional accuracy and elimination of postprocessing steps. Industries move from laser-cut technology to ultrafast laser technology for machining accuracy, thus enabling earlier marketing of their products. Available in the picosecond and femtosecond variants, these lasers have also gained traction in the medical and defence equipment manufacturing sectors. Technological advances in industries such as consumer electronics, automobiles, healthcare, networking and telecom and computing have created the need for small and robust electronic devices. Such portable electronic equipment demands precise dimensional accuracy for components.
7.1. High-peak-power lasers
Ultra-short pulsed, intense lasers can deliver a high peak power of coherent light with a minimal amount of energy, to be used as a driver for high gradient acceleration technology through the creation of a plasma. In seeking higher peak intensity laser pulses, the tactic is to begin with a low-energy, ultra-short pulse from an oscillator and to increase its energy level through a series of amplifiers. These amplifiers are based on gain media that transfer energy from pump sources into the broad spectral frequencies of the ultra-short signal pulse to be amplified (i.e., through amplified stimulated emission or optical parametric amplification). The gain medium mostly used for the shortest pulsed laser systems is sapphire crystal doped with Ti
${}^{3+}$
ions (Ti:Sa), whose optical properties support energy transfer to a wide spectral bandwidth (
$\approx$
300 nm) and set the typical laser operating wavelength in the near-infrared (NIR) region of the spectrum (
$\lambda \sim 800$
nm). The pulse duration of these systems is typically in the femtosecond regime (1 fs:
${10}^{-15}$
s). At this pulse duration even small energies, that is, microjoules, are sufficient to reach intensities that degrade the beam quality within the gain media and eventually reach the point of damaging the material. This historically prevented progress towards increasing laser intensities. The introduction of CPA[
Reference Strickland and Mourou8,
Reference Mourou236,
Reference Strickland237] allows overcoming this material limitation by stretching the spectral frequencies of the short pulse in time, the so-called chirp. Doing so in a controlled manner permits the individual frequencies to be amplified towards the energy limit and then recombined in time within a compressor, as illustrated in Figure 11. Here, laser systems are referred to by their pulse peak power level, which is defined as pulse energy divided by the pulse duration, that is, TW class (1 TW =
${10}^{12}$
W), which is readily available. Several PW-level lasers are available at facilities around the world with the record for the highest power laser system set by the 10 PW HPLS of ELI-NP facility, having roughly 250 J within a 25 fs pulse duration[
Reference Dancus, Cojocaru, Schmelz, Matei, Vasescu, Nistor, Talposi, Iancu, Bleotu and Naziru239]. Along with the continued development of the achievable amplified pulse energy comes the potential peak power delivered in the focused intensity of these laser facilities. This value has been increasing over the years with the highest reported intensity being
${10}^{23}$
W/cm
${}^2$
by the 4 PW laser at CoReLS, in Gwangju, Republic of Korea[
Reference Yoon, Kim, Choi, Sung, Lee, Lee and Nam129] (see Figure 12).

Figure 11 Schematic of the CPA technique in the optical domain for the generation of high-peak-power, ultra-short pulse laser light. Adapted from Ref. [238].

Figure 12 Evolution of focused laser intensity showing the main advances and leading to the achievement of the ultra-relativistic regime.
7.2. High-average-power intense lasers
As anticipated, most high-intensity lasers to date use indirect (laser-pumped-laser) CPA architectures based on high-energy Ti:Sa amplifiers pumped by frequency doubled, Q-switched nanosecond Nd lasers. The pulse duration of Ti:Sa CPA lasers is around 30 fs at a wavelength centred around 800 nm with average power ranging from a few watts (
$\sim 0.1$
Hz) to
$\approx 300$
W (10 Hz). They have already demonstrated acceleration of high-energy particles in the GeV range and schemes for producing higher particle energy via multiple staging. An important next step for the context of this document is the demonstration of higher pulse repetition rate operation of the order of 100 Hz or more at high average power, beyond the current limit of approximately
$100$
W. Figure 13 shows the average power of various laser facilities and technologies. The increase of the pulse repetition rate of the laser systems is limited by several factors, including the pump laser technology and, specifically, the ability to manage the corresponding increased thermal load on the gain medium (Ti:Sa crystals), beam propagation optics and compressor diffraction gratings. Most of the existing facilities use pump lasers based on inefficient flashlamp technology. One exception is the HAPLS[
Reference Borneis, Laštovička, Sokol, Jeong, Condamine, Renner, Tikhonchuk, Bohlin, Fajstavr, Hernandez, Jourdain, Kumar, Modřanský, Pokorný, Wolf, Zhai, Korn and Weber241] (ELI Beamlines L3) laser developed by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) in the United States which is the first PW-class laser to take advantage of the improved efficiency provided by diode pump laser technology of the pump lasers of the Ti:Sa architecture. The HAPLS pump engine has a design pulse energy of around 70 J at 527 nm generated from two Nd:glass, multi-slab amplifiers operating at 1053 nm and pumped with 885 nm diodes at 10 Hz, both cooled by helium gas at room temperature[
Reference Bayramian242]. A similar architecture and cooling approach are adopted in the final Ti:Sa amplifier. The system has recently been commissioned at ELI Beamlines and has demonstrated 16 J pulses at 28 fs and 3.3 Hz (53 W average power)[
Reference Wang, Wang, Rockwood, Luther, Hollinger, Curtis, Calvi, Menoni and Rocca243].

Figure 13 Chart of laser systems and respective average power, that is, pulse repetition rate versus pulse energy[ Reference Gaul and Tóth240].
Progress in flashlamp-based pump lasers has also been achieved with the Amplitude Technologies P60 pump system at the ELI-ALPS[ Reference Nagymihály, Falcoz, Bussiere, Bohus, Pajer, Lehotai, Ravet-Senkans, Roy, Calvez, Mollica, Branly, Paul, Börzsönyi, Varjú, Szabó and Kalashnikov244] facility, demonstrating 53 J at 532 nm with over 3 million shots at up to 10 Hz[ Reference Mason, Divoky, Ertel, Pilar, Butcher, Hanuš, Banerjee, Phillips, Smith, De Vido, Lucianetti, Hernandez-Gomez, Edwards, Mocek and Collier245]. Here flashlamps are used to pump multiple ceramic neodymium-doped yttrium aluminium garnet (Nd:YAG) thin-disk amplifier modules in an active-mirror configuration, cooled by liquid at room temperature. The final Ti:Sa amplifier also uses a room-temperature liquid coolant.
Direct CPA architectures, which combine the advantages of direct diode pumping of a broad bandwidth gain medium, offering the potential of higher efficiency, are also being developed. The PENELOPE (HZDR, Germany) and POLARIS (HI-Jena, Germany) lasers use crystalline Yb:CaF2 and a mixture of Yb:glass/Yb:CaF2 gain media, respectively, both pumped with diodes at 940 nm. However, the smaller bandwidth of Yb:CaF2 compared to Ti:Sa limits the shortest pulse duration to 150 fs. PENELOPE is designed to produce an average power of 150 W (150 J at 1 Hz) at 1030 nm[ Reference Albach, Loeser, Siebold and Schramm246].
Alternative optical parametric chirped pulse amplification (OPCPA) architectures exploiting optical parametric amplification within large-aperture lithium triborate (LBO) crystals are also under development. These include diode-pumped lasers at the ELI Beamlines facility, L1 ALLEGRA (100 mJ at 1 kHz) and L2 AMOS (100 TW, 2–5 J between 10 and 50 Hz)[ Reference Rus, Bakule, Kramer, Naylon, Thoma, Fibrich, Green, Lagron, Antipenkov and Bartoníek247] and the Shenguang II Multi-PW beamline (SIOM, China)[ Reference Xie, Zhu, Yang, Kang, Zhu, Guo, Zhu and Gao248]. The OPCPA pump laser at the heart of the AMOS system is based on DiPOLE diode-pumped ceramic Yb:YAG multi-slab amplifier technology, cooled by cryogenic helium gas, developed by the Central Laser Facility at the STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK. DiPOLE pump lasers have demonstrated efficient and stable operation with average powers of over 1 kW (100 J at 10 Hz) at 1030 nm, pumped by 940 nm diodes[ Reference Mason, Divoky, Ertel, Pilar, Butcher, Hanuš, Banerjee, Phillips, Smith, De Vido, Lucianetti, Hernandez-Gomez, Edwards, Mocek and Collier245]. The properties of these lasers are shown in Table 4.
Table 4 A sample list of ultra-intense lasers with repetition rates above 1 Hz, with diverse gain media and their main parameters a .

a Asterisks denote parameters of the lasers which are currently under commissioning.
Although progress over the past decade has been significant, with kW pump lasers for Ti:Sa systems emerging (e.g., P60 and DiPOLE), laser driver technology for particle accelerators still requires a further increase in average power of at least one order of magnitude, to 10 kW, and an increase in pulse repetition rate to greater than 100 Hz. To meet these requirements, all measures leading to a gain in efficiency will be crucial, especially if scaling to high-energy accelerators is foreseen. For comparison, in RF accelerators there is a great deal of attention to the wall-plug efficiency of RF power coupling to the accelerator cavity that is typically above 60%. To aim at such values, all the losses of efficiency will have to be tackled and diode pumping in place of flashlamps is definitely the first step. The major challenge here will be to increase the lifetime of the diodes while reducing the cost, possibly exploring new approaches that natively support higher frequency operation and production techniques that can scale to larger numbers to reduce costs. Potential improvements in diode laser efficiency and peak power scaling can also be achieved by cooling diode bars to near-cryogenic temperatures. A recent R&D project Cryolaser at the FBH facility demonstrated 1.7 kW peak power (1.2 ms, 10 Hz) from a single bar at 940 nm with greater efficiency than 60% when cooled to 223 K[ Reference Crump, Frevert, Hösler, Bugge, Knigge, Pittroff, Erbert and Tränkle249]. Increasing the diode power density and therefore reducing the number of bars required offers another approach to cost reduction for higher-power pump systems.
The Extreme Photonics Applications Centre (EPAC) at the STFC[ Reference Mason, Stuart, Phillips, Heathcote, Buck, Wojtusiak, Galimberti, de Faria Pinto, Hawkes, Tomlinson, Pattathil, Butcher, Hernandez-Gomez and Collier250] facility in the UK, over the next 5 years, will provide a unique capability to study applications of 10 Hz PW laser-driven accelerators and test strategies for power and pulse rate scaling. This includes a pathway to exploit 100 Hz DiPOLE pump technology currently under development at STFC, which would push PW-class lasers to an average power of 3 kW at an output energy of 30 J. On a similar trajectory, Amplitude Technologies is working on pathways to extend the repetition rate of the P60 pump laser to 50 Hz, and possibly 100 Hz, with minimum investment and no impact on thermal management, by replacing the flashlamp cassette with a diode cassette. With these performances it is possible to imagine using up to six of these next-generation pump lasers, possibly exploiting pulse interleaving techniques, to pump a Ti:Sa amplifier system and deliver sub-100 fs pulses with 10 kW (100 J, 100 Hz) average power before compression. Similar performances have been envisaged for the EuPRAXIA project and conceptual design of the required beamlines has already been delivered[ Reference Gizzi, Koester, Labate, Mathieu, Mazzotta, Toci and Vannini184]. Intermediate steps towards these goals are underway in projects such as k-BELLA at LBNL (United States) and KALDERA at DESY (Germany) aiming to deliver 3 J in 30 fs at 1 kHz, a first attempt to hit the kHz barrier. The architecture of this laser has not yet been chosen and there are several possibilities, all based on indirect Ti:Sa amplifier schemes, either cryo-cooled to improve efficiency and thermal management and pumped by Yb:YAG based lasers, or as thin disks with an active-mirror geometry, pumped by incoherently combined fibre lasers cryo-cooled with gas jets.
Ti:Sa lasers have proven reliability and higher TRL compared to other technologies and are the most widely used systems for LPA research. With the aim to develop higher average power systems, both the optical-to-optical and the overall wall-plug efficiencies of the laser become a concern as the laser cooling capacity, and complexity of the laser design, scales with the amount of energy converted into heat in the laser gain medium. For indirect CPA architectures the efficiencies for each laser, wavelength converter and all optical transfer stages must be taken into consideration and will eventually become a limiting factor due to prohibitive electrical power requirements. For this reason, a baseline Ti:Sa design requires the most effective strategies to reduce power consumption to an acceptable level while providing a viable solution compatible with mid-term application goals. For the purpose of this paper, scaling the pulse repetition rate to the kHz level and beyond becomes mandatory and electrical power consumption can be significantly reduced by adopting a direct diode-pumped CPA architecture.
7.2.1. Fibre lasers
Development of efficient, high-average-power ultra-short pulses also relies on the use of fibre lasers. At the current level of development the generation of high-peak-power levels from fibre lasers is limited by the tight confinement of the laser beam inside the fibre core over long interaction lengths. This leads to strong accumulations of nonlinear effects, especially self-phase modulation (SPM) encountered in the femtosecond regime, which distort the output pulse temporal profile and limit the maximum peak power achievable. Scaling the fibre core size in large mode area (LMA) fibres inevitably leads to multimode operation that affects the spatial profile of the beam and induces instabilities due to mode competition. To overcome this limit some methods have been proposed, among them the coherent beam combining (CBC) of the output of several fibres[ Reference Daniault, Bellanger, Le Dortz, Bourderionnet, Lallier, Larat, Antier-Murgey, Chanteloup, Brignon, Simon-Boisson and Mourou251] and enhancement schemes based on a resonant cavity[ Reference Hanna, Guichard, Zaouter, Papadopoulos, Druon and Georges252]. The principle of CBC is to divide a single source into several N channels, each with a dedicated fibre amplifier. The outputs of the N amplified channels are coherently combined in free space into one single beam, which carries N times the power of a single fibre. This technique can also be applied to femtosecond pulses, combining the coherent amplification network (CAN) laser with a standard CPA architecture. The N output beams from the individual fibre amplifiers are recombined (i.e., using lenslet arrays or diffractive optical elements) providing a single, coherent output beam. Due to the phase noise introduced in the fibre amplification process, the phase of the pulse amplified by each fibre requires an active control loop. A review of the CAN techniques for ultrafast fibre laser systems can be found, for instance, in Ref. [Reference Limpert, Klenke, Kienel, Breitkopf, Eidam, Hadrich, Jauregui and Tunnermann253]. Projects are underway to exploit a coherent combination of very large numbers of fibre amplifiers for energy scaling. The XCAN project in Europe[ Reference Daniault, Bellanger, Le Dortz, Bourderionnet, Lallier, Larat, Antier-Murgey, Chanteloup, Brignon, Simon-Boisson and Mourou251], a collaboration between Ecole Polytechnique (LULI) and Thales (TRT) in France, is developing a proof-of-concept demonstration that aims to combine over 60 fibres delivering 10 mJ in 350 fs pulses at 50 kHz in its first phase. To date the project has successfully combined the output from 37 fibre amplifiers. More recently, the Jena group achieved coherent combination of 96 fibres delivering 23 mJ and 674 W in a 235 fs pulse[ Reference Stark, Buldt, Müller, Klenke, Tünnermann and Limpert254].
7.2.2. Thin-disk lasers
In the past decade a strong research and technological development effort has been directed towards laser systems that combine ultrafast (i.e., from a few picoseconds or sub-picoseconds) pulse duration with a relatively high (in the range from several 10 W to multiple 100 W) average power, obtained from the combination of relatively low pulse energy with a high pulse repetition rate (e.g., several MHz). Besides the scientific applications, this interest has been motivated mainly by the development of new, high-precision material processing techniques.
Indeed, machining of delicate and heat-sensitive materials benefits from the use of ultra-short pulse duration, enabling results that cannot be reached with conventional laser processing with continuous or nanosecond-pulsed lasers[ Reference Sugioka and Cheng255]. As conventional Ti:Sa ultrafast systems based on 1–10 kHz regenerative amplifiers are unable to provide a sufficient machining speed for industrial applications, novel ultra-short pulse generation and amplification concepts based on other laser media, mainly Yb doped, have emerged in recent years. Different laser concepts were applied, starting from the known rod to disk or slab designs, and extending to fibre lasers. These new developments quickly provided reliable laser sources with ultra-short pulse durations for high-quality laser material processing. Thin-disk lasers are therefore now established at an industrial level and can provide kW average power and sub-picosecond pulse duration. In thin-disk lasers, the disk is mounted on a heat sink and functions as a high-reflection (HR) mirror for the laser resonator and a bending mirror for the pump beam, as shown in Figure 14.

Figure 14 Working principle of a thin-disk amplifier (adapted from https://www.rp-photonics.com/thin_disk_lasers.html).
We underline here that specifications of thin-disk lasers are not, by themselves, adequate to drive a plasma accelerator, but given the availability of robust, industrial-grade systems at high average power, different approaches are being pursued to make this technology play a role in particle acceleration. One approach consists of post compression of spectrally broadened pulses, as in the case of the multi-pass technique using a gas cell[ Reference Viotti, Seidel, Escoto, Rajhans, Leemans, Hartl and Heyl256]. This approach is currently being implemented at higher and higher peak and average power levels and is providing a possible alternative path to light sources with tens to hundreds of TW peak power and multiple kW of average power.
In this context, a completely different approach[ Reference Jakobsson, Hooker and Walczak257] for LPAs based on thin-disk technology relies on a plasma modulation effect that can convert a picosecond pulse in a train of ultra-short pulses that can resonantly drive an electron plasma accelerator. Experimental demonstration of this scheme is in progress and the perspective is that industrial kW, ps laser systems may enable efficient generation of high-energy electron beams.
7.2.3. Direct diode-pumped CPA amplifiers
Direct diode pumping of suitable gain material capable of supporting CPA offers the potential of femtosecond pulse amplification with higher wall-plug efficiency, lower complexity, dramatically lower thermal load and improved mean-time between failures. We stress that reducing the thermal load has a two-fold beneficial effect on wall-plug efficiency, reducing power needs for pump lasers and lowering the cooling power requirements.
The quest for a suitable gain material for direct diode pumping for CPA has been ongoing for several years and a number of solutions have been identified, which are currently being explored. As anticipated above, Yb-doped materials such as Yb:YAG and Yb:
${\mathrm{CaF}}_2$
are being extensively explored and are delivering efficient, high average power in the sub-ps regime. These gain materials combine the advantage of the diode pumping just below 1 μm with the low quantum defect of the emission just above 1 μm.
One approach under investigation at LLNL (United States) uses direct diode pumping of a gas-cooled thulium-doped yttrium lithium fluoride (Tm:YLF) amplifier and is being designed to provide high scalability in both pulse energy and repetition rate, as well as high efficiency[ Reference Sistrunk, Alessi, Bayramian, Chesnut, Erlandson, Galvin, Gibson, Nguyen, Reagan, Schaffers, Siders, Spinka and Haefner258]. It foresees operation at a longer wavelength near 2 μm and can be pumped by existing commercial diodes emitting around 800 nm. This is a promising ultra-short pulse laser platform, with high average power and high repetition rate[ Reference Sistrunk, Alessi, Bayramian, Chesnut, Erlandson, Galvin, Gibson, Nguyen, Reagan, Schaffers, Siders, Spinka and Haefner258], due to its potential high-energy storage capability[ Reference Tamer, Reagan, Galvin, Galbraith, Sistrunk, Church, Huete, Neurath and Spinka259], mainly because of the long fluorescence time of Tm, of the order of milliseconds, that can enable the so-called multi-pulse extraction regime[ Reference Galvin, Bayramian, Chesnut, Erlandson, Siders, Sistrunk, Spinka and Haefner260] for very-high-repetition-rate operation. It is foreseen that the bandwidth available for amplification should enable a pulse duration of 50 fs or less. Recently, short pulse operation of Tm:YLF was demonstrated[ Reference Tamer, Hubka, Kiani, Owens, Church, Batysta, Galvin, Willard, Yandow, Galbraith, Alessi, Harthcock, Hickman, Jackson, Nissen, Tardiff, Nguyen, Sistrunk, Spinka and Reagan261] with TW-level peak power, confirming the potential of this platform. The large quantum defect set by the lasing around 2 μm and pumping at 800 nm is effectively compensated by the well-known cross-relaxation effects in Tm, thus leading to an estimated overall wall-plug efficiency as high as 30%, a major gain if compared to current systems.
Other thulium-doped host materials are also being explored with a cubic crystal structure that enables a ceramic gain medium, compared to YLF whose tetragonal crystal structure requires gain material from a single crystal. Thulium-doped polycrystalline ceramic materials exhibit high thermal conductivity, scalability, cost-effectiveness and doping flexibility[
Reference Rastogi and Chaurasia262]. Among these materials, ceramic
$\mathrm{Tm}{:}{\mathrm{Lu}}_2{\mathrm{O}}_3$
, along with other thulium-doped sesquioxides, is being explored for its lasing efficiency[
Reference Fregosi, Brandi, Labate, Baffigi, Cellamare, Ezzat, Palla, Toci, Whitehead and Gizzi263] as well as exceptional thermal conductivity, which is higher than that of any other laser material and is suitable for relatively thick disk architectures[
Reference Palla, Labate, Baffigi, Cellamare and Gizzi264–
Reference Vetrovec, Shah, Endo, Koumvakalis, Masters, Wooster, Widen and Lassovsky266].
Remarkably, 2 μm high-power pulsed laser systems are currently also being investigated as promising solid-state laser sources for improved extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems based on laser-driven tin microdroplet plasma emission, due to the expected and measured higher generation efficiency at 13.5 nm (up to a factor of two)[ Reference Behnke, Schupp, Bouza, Bayraktar, Mazzotta, Meijer, Sheil, Witte, Ubachs, Hoekstra and Versolato267– Reference Mostafa, Behnke, Engels, Bouza, Sheil, Ubachs and Versolato269].
7.2.4. Diode-pumped OPCPA systems
OPCPA uses a different approach to amplification of broadband laser pulses that is developing fast and holds the promise of delivering revolutionary performances to drive plasma accelerators and other major applications of such high-intensity lasers. Unlike CPA (Figure 15(a)), OPCPA (Figure 15(b)) uses parametric gain within a single pass through a nonlinear crystal that can be very high, so that OPCPA systems require fewer amplification stages and usually do not involve complicated multi-pass geometries. With optimized phase-matching conditions, the gain bandwidth can be very large, allowing femtosecond high-energy pulses to be generated. Thermal effects in the amplifier crystal, such as thermal lensing, are much weaker than in a laser amplifier, since there is only a small amount of heating due to weak parasitic absorption. This together with the very high quantum efficiency allows for scaling to very high energy and peak power levels, and also to a high beam quality of the amplified pulses. As the parametric gain occurs only within the duration of the pump pulse, one avoids the problems of power losses by amplified spontaneous emission in high-gain laser amplifiers. Also, one can easily generate high-energy pulses with very high-intensity contrast, that is, with a very low level of power before the actual pulse. Based on this approach, several high-energy systems are in operation[ Reference Li, Leng and Li271] or are being developed, including the DUHA system at ELI Beamlines[ Reference Green, Bartoníek, Indra, Fibrich, Eisenschreiber, Novák, Majer, Tykalewicz and Rus272], the SYLOS lasers at ELI-ALPS[ Reference Toth, Stanislauskas, Balciunas, Budriunas, Adamonis, Danilevicius, Viskontas, Lengvinas, Veitas, Gadonas, Varanavičius, Csontos, Somoskoi, Toth, Borzsonyi and Osvay273] and Vulcan at CLF[ Reference Buck, Oliveira, Angelides and Galimberti274].

Figure 15 Operating principle of the CPA scheme used in common titanium sapphire laser amplifiers (a) and the comparable OPCPA scheme (b). Adapted from Ref. [Reference Heyl, Arnold, Couairon and L’Huillier270].
7.2.5. Technology readiness of high-average-power laser drivers
The above description of the range of ultrafast, high-average-power laser technologies and architectures can be summarized by the plot of Figure 16, where the most advanced approaches are compared with respect to their estimated TRL and ultimate foreseen wall-plug efficiency. Clearly, the current industry standard for PW-class lasers, namely titanium sapphire, is established for scientific proof-of-principle demonstrator operations and will continue to serve, also in the foreseen nuclear applications development phase, for prototyping of components and subsystems. In the medium term, more efficient technologies will develop, with some of them eventually becoming the new standard for high workload, 24/7 applications, and industrial uses.

Figure 16 TRL of main laser driver technologies versus wall-plug efficiency, ranging from established flashlamp-pumped Ti:Sa systems to fibre systems with coherent combination, to diode-pumped technology for Ti:Sa, OPCPA, Yb:YAG thin-disk and direct diode-pumped CPA systems.
Each of these schemes has its own bottlenecks and critical issues, as outlined above. In some cases these issues concern the availability of materials (crystals, ceramics), while in others the issues are thermal management, quality, stability and complexity. All of these issues are currently being tackled at different levels in an increasing number of laboratories and solutions are emerging at a fast pace, making the risk related to the laser driver development manageable. A paramount example of these developments is the engagement of large laser infrastructures (e.g., Eupraxia, ELI) in further laser development, where the target is indeed the enhancement of the average power and the repetition rate to soon hit the barrier of the kW–kHz range where most of the envisaged applications become viable.
8. LDADS design and implementation: risk analysis
Given the uniqueness of the proposed high-performance LDADS, technical risk analysis will be a key step of the preparatory work. Generally speaking, two particular issues could arise for components of the plant: (i) unforeseen technical problems may limit the final performance of a subsystem, and (ii) the ultimate performance of key components, currently based on simulations, could be overestimated compared to the actual experimental output because of computational limitations, new physics processes or unavoidable imperfections.
With these in mind, risk reduction can be based on the following criteria. A technical design should be, as much as possible, based on proven concepts and solutions.
-
• The baseline for all machine subsystems is thus either already at a high technical readiness level or an extrapolation of existing technology, particularly for critical components, such as the laser driver and the neutron generation process.
-
• A development phase including a number of test experiments must be planned for all components and subsystems, and for the most critical one, full-scale prototypes will be developed and checked.
-
• The subsystems are designed to be very well-characterized machines with a high level of control. Extensive diagnostics, feedback and correction systems are foreseen to be implemented.
-
• Backup options are defined for the most critical subsystems and will be included in the planning for R&D and prototyping to ensure that they could, if necessary, be implemented with the minimum change in cost, schedule and scope possible.
While some of these technical risks are specific to the LDADS, other risks are shared with other nuclear installations. Here we focus on the specific risks and outline the main foreseen technical issues that may arise and provide a preliminary outline.
8.1. Laser developments
For the laser driver, as the most innovative subsystem of the installation, a development phase is foreseen, followed by a down-selection of the final technology among those outlined above. A fundamental risk concerning the laser driver lies in the possibility to reach the required repetition rate and efficiency. Depending on the technology, overall wall-plug efficiency and related thermal management of the laser components are the priority.
The development phase should proceed with a stepwise approach, with increasing average power of the single laser unit, and engineering to reduce costs and increase reliability. If the planned development activities reveal any physical constraints in this respect, a redesign of the laser system based on alternative technologies would have to be considered. A staged integration and a whole range of testing and prototyping activities will then be carried out to demonstrate scalability and projected efficiency, prior to production of individual laser units. Depending on the technology, high-level risks need to be considered for backup solutions in case the technical design R&D raises fundamental performance limitations.
Laser stability and operation reliability requirements are of primary concern for a viable plasma accelerator operation. This lies intrinsically in the possibility of multiplexing basic unit systems, including a laser unit and plasma targets, to the number needed to reach the required neutron level. A mitigation strategy could foresee the design of an alternative basic unit plasma accelerator with evolutionary technology.
8.2. Target system developments
Plasma target specifications will depend on the neutron production mechanism that will be down-selected after the development phase. In general, plasma targets, either solid/liquid targets or gas targets, are already provided as standard industrial components and require a modest adaptation to the laser-driven accelerator setup. The installation foreseen here will add significant challenges to the design and fabrication of components by requiring components that can withstand significantly higher repetition rates than the usual case in current plasma acceleration operation. To overcome these issues for the target design, the options are being explored conceptually and will be extensively tested in the coming development stage. This strategy will also help address the risk of simulation errors described above. In addition to experimental testing, the development phase will focus on cross-checking the simulation results with multiple codes and producing complete tolerance studies.
The development of secondary targets, from which neutrons are generated, seems less risky. On the one hand, in a scheme where neutrons are generated in the cooling material of the subcritical reactor, one can benefit from the already ongoing developments of accelerator-driven subcritical reactors, such as MYRHHA. On the other hand, if a neutron target is needed separately from the subcritical reactor, then one can consider the rich experience in design and operation of similar target systems that have been used in accelerator-driven neutron sources for decades (such as ISIS[ Reference Thomason275], ESS[ Reference Andersen, Argyriou, Jackson, Houston, Henry, Deen, Toft-Petersen, Beran, Strobl and Arnold276] and more).
8.3. Radiation safety and environment protection
Although based on novel laser acceleration technologies, the proposed LDADS installation will share issues similar to other ADS projects with regard to its radiological effects, materials and water consumption, environmental emissions and most other environmental impact factors. However, full studies are needed on how to design and implement safety and control systems in a comprehensive way to limit the environmental effects of the facility. This will be carried out in close collaboration with dedicated technical groups and thus build on extensive experience from other operational or planned machines. A specific benefit of this installation compared to other ADS designs is the potential for a considerable reduction of the accelerator footprint due to the potentially higher gradients of LPAs.
8.4. Operational stability and safety
One of the major criticisms of accelerator-driven subcritical reactors is that the existing LINAC or cyclotron technology so far is not free from beam tripping, which causes a huge impact on operational risk. This operational risk is of an economic nature primarily, as beam trips may cause the cease of the fission processes in the subcritical reactor, causing a complete stop of energy production for a few days. It should be emphasized that such beam trips do not affect the inherent nuclear safety of the subcritical reactor. An LDADS promises, by construction, more reliable and safer neutron production. It is worth looking at the major components and what risk of operation they mean in the case of unexpected failure.
8.4.1. Laser systems
The reliability and robustness of an LDADS are based on the multiple number of identical individual laser systems. To show the numbers, we assume that an LDADS consists of N units of identical laser systems, each specified for a trouble-free operation of H hours. We assume that the LDADS has a normal maintenance period of W weeks. The probability that one laser system becomes unavailable in between two maintenance periods is as follows:
$$\begin{align*}P(l)=\sum \limits_{i=0}^l\left(\begin{array}{c}N\\ {}i\end{array}\right){\left(1-\frac{H}{168W}\right)}^{N-i}{\left(\frac{H}{168W}\right)}^i,\end{align*}$$
where we assumed that
$168W>H$
, otherwise the probability is zero. In numbers, if the maintenance period is 50 weeks, the trouble-free operation of a laser system is two months (
${\sim}1440$
hours), and assuming the LDADS consists of 100 laser units, the probability of one laser failing between two maintenance periods is
${10}^{-7}$
.
The above consideration is also a key element of optimizing the number of laser systems and their requirement of trouble-free operation. If lasers are more reliable, then – from this point of view – fewer laser systems would provide the same reliability and vice versa. For instance, 10 laser systems would be enough if their trouble-free operation is 10 months (7250 hours). Hence, a given reliability can be ensured with the variation of the number of laser systems and their trouble-free operation.
8.4.2. Accelerator target systems
It is expected that several laser beams would be combined and steered to a laser–plasma target system. Hence, if a target system becomes faulty, it may cause more trouble in operation than a laser beam falling out. Assuming that the number of target systems is an order of magnitude lower than the laser systems, the reliability of a target system is more critical than a single laser. The risk mitigation may consider solutions such as multiplication of the target systems, so that the laser beams could be switched between them in a few seconds.
8.4.3. Subcritical reactor
The necessary power of the neutron beam strongly depends on the subcriticality of the reactor. The higher the value of
$k$
, the lower the necessary power. The estimations shown in Section 3 assume that
$k=0.97$
. This is a consequence of the state-of-the-art of accelerators, which is defined by two major considerations. Firstly, the instability of the external particle beam (see above regarding the beam trips) may cause a risk to increase
$k$
. Secondly, the neutron source is in the middle of the reactor, partially due to the fact that a single external particle source is assumed.
Considering an LDADS, by careful design, the
$k$
value could be increased, hence the necessary laser power could be ultimately reduced by several factors. The overall nuclear stability of the fission (and thermal stress) could be further increased by spatially distributed multiple neutron sources[
Reference Liu, Zhang, Liu, Dou and Wang24], a possibility inherently offered by the multiple sources of the LDADS.
9. Laser-driven systems and green energy
Laser-driven fast neutron sources offer significant promise for green energy applications by addressing key challenges in nuclear power generation, waste reduction and the development of emerging clean energy technologies. Their ability to deliver intense, high-energy neutron flux is particularly valuable in advanced nuclear systems, such as the ADS, where an external neutron source is needed to sustain controlled fission in subcritical reactors. By providing a reliable supply of high-energy neutrons, laser-driven sources not only improve operational safety, but also enable the transmutation of nuclear waste, converting long-lived transuranic isotopes into more manageable or shorter-lived elements.
In fusion research, these neutron sources play a critical role in both ICF experiments and materials testing. The fast neutrons generated during fusion-like processes serve as diagnostic tools to optimize target design and fusion efficiency. Moreover, they allow researchers to analyse radiation damage in reactor materials under conditions similar to those expected in future commercial fusion plants, helping validate next-generation materials that can withstand extreme temperatures and intense fast neutron fluxes.
Beyond nuclear power, laser-driven neutron beams also support a broad range of materials research relevant to green technologies. Their short, high-brightness pulses enable advanced imaging and diagnostic methods for photovoltaics, battery components and other sustainable energy devices. They also offer promising avenues for environmental and industrial applications, such as neutron activation analysis (NAA) and real-time monitoring of coal and biomass feedstocks, improving resource use and lowering emissions.
By combining compact design, high brightness and tuneable energy, laser-driven fast neutron sources position themselves at the forefront of efforts to advance safer, cleaner and more efficient energy solutions worldwide.
9.1. Comparison of RF- and laser-based neutron sources
To drive a 100
${\mathrm{MW}}$
ADS for green energy production, any neutron source would become technologically feasible once it is able to provide at least
${10}^{15}$
$\mathrm{neutrons}/({\mathrm{cm}}^2\cdot\mathrm{s}$
) that is reliable 24/7/365. The important parameter for maintaining the stability of a subcritical reactor is the repetition rate of the external neutron source. Of course, the higher the repetition rate, the better, and the most continuous is the best. To establish the requirement for a pulsed neutron source, we need to consider that an ADS can typically tolerate a beam trip that lasts no longer than a few seconds. That is, a neutron source at a 1 Hz repetition rate may be just about satisfactory, but a 10 Hz repetition would provide a safer margin.
RF accelerator-based neutron sources have already demonstrated the production of the necessary neutron yield. They are capable of running at the necessary repetition rate (e.g., ISIS: 50 Hz, ESS: 20 Hz, MYRHHA: 20 Hz) and, in principle, generate neutrons 24/7. In practice, due to beam trips and further technological challenges, no RF accelerator-driven neutron source has been known to run uninterruptedly for more than a few weeks so far.
Current laser-based sources that provide the highest neutron number per laser shot run in single-pulse mode. A few hours-long continuous pulsed operation with a significant neutron yield around
${10}^6$
neutrons/s has just been demonstrated at 0.5 Hz[
Reference Lelièvre, Catrix, Vallières, Fourmaux, Allaoua, Anthonippillai, Antici, Ducasse and Fuchs38] and 10 Hz[
Reference Stuhl, Varmazyar, Elekes, Halász, Gilinger, Füle, Karnok, Buzás, Kovács, Nagy, Mohácsi, Bíró, Csedreki, Fenyvesi, Fülöp, Korkulu, Kuti, Csontos, Geetha, Tóth, Szabó and Osvay40]. Currently, one PW-class laser of ELI-ERIC is aimed at operating at 10 Hz, too, while several multi-10 TW lasers with kW-range average power are in construction for operating at 100 Hz. With the development of target technology, there appears to be no principal obstacle that would, in a few years, prevent a laser-based neutron source from operating 24/7/365 with a yield exceeding
${10}^{10}\ \mathrm{neutrons}/\mathrm{s}$
. As tens of kW-class lasers suitable for pumping are already available, it is foreseen that the ultimate neutron yield would peak around
${{10}^{12}{-}{10}^{14}}$
$\mathrm{neutrons}/\mathrm{s}$
per single laser system. Along with the above performance reachable in 10 years, we also estimate the overall plug-in efficiency increasing to a few percent, but it would remain still a few times lower than that of RF accelerators.
Ultimately, green energy production by the LDADS will possibly use a modular approach based on these developments for plasma accelerators, combining many such systems to reach the required MW average power, in a similar fashion as for IFE, where a 10 MW laser average power is envisaged for the future reactor, obtained by combining (incoherently) many multi-kW beamlines[ Reference Batani, Colaïtis, Consoli, Danson, Gizzi, Honrubia, Kühl, Le Pape, Miquel, Perlado, Scott, Tatarakis, Tikhonchuk and Volpe55]. As the operational stability of an ADS increases with the number of independent neutron sources, the currently foreseen number of 20–100 laser systems necessary to drive an ADS is rather beneficial.
We think that the choice between LDADS and ADS technologies would be defined by the actual business case, the leverage between the running costs and assets. With regard to long-term running costs, the efficiency of the wall plug and the stability of the operation are the two key factors. In other words, what is affordable: a lower plug-in efficiency but reliable operation, or a higher operation cost without the fear of stopping the ADS, hence energy production/transmutation. As far as assets are concerned, the laser systems need a much smaller footprint and basically no radiation shielding, while the RF accelerator has a large footprint and serious radiation protection enclosing the entire installation. The size of the subcritical reactor and its radiation protection seem the same for both cases.
9.2. Nuclear fuel enrichment
Firstly, in the nuclear industry, an important application is fuel enrichment. Currently, according to the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), 415 nuclear reactors are in operation worldwide[ 277], among which, approximately 90% of them exploit fuels with enriched uranium (i.e., a material with a fissile nuclide U-235 content higher than the natural value, 0.711%), up to 5%. Only Canadian reactors (CANDU type), using heavy water, can directly exploit natural uranium. The process with which natural uranium is enriched in its fissile component, which is the isotope 235, is referred to as ‘enrichment’, and represents a very complex – but also important – technology. Uranium can be enriched with various technologies, such as gas diffusion[ Reference Villani278] or ultracentrifugation[ Reference Koh, Almughlliq, Vaswani, Peiris and Mitchell279], which require different amounts of energy. Recently, a technology based on laser application was developed and is already operational in some plants (the SILEX plant in Sydney, Australia). The separation of isotopes by laser excitation (SILEX) process[ Reference Snyder280] is the only third-generation enrichment technology at an advanced stage of commercialization today; its separation efficiency is much higher compared to centrifuge technology. Laser technology in fact presents the following characteristics:
-
• inherently higher efficiency resulting in lower enrichment costs;
-
• smaller environmental footprint than centrifuge and diffusion plants;
-
• greater flexibility in producing advanced fuels for advanced SMRs;
-
• it is expected to have the lowest enrichment plant capital costs.
The technology is based on the physical phenomenon linked to selective ionization of isotope 235 with respect to 238 if special lasers are applied: ionized uranium is then collected by using an electric or magnetic field. The technique can also be used for the separation of other types of nuclides. If a centrifuge consumes 50 kWh/SWU (separative working unit, which represents somehow the ‘effort’ needed to separate the fertile part of the fuel), early estimates mention 15 kWh/SWU with laser separation technologies[ Reference Rigny281]. More advanced laser technologies could further improve this value and the economical convenience of these kinds of plants.
9.3. Laser inertial confinement fusion
In August 2021 the NIF of the LLNL (United States) announced a major advance in reaching ignition, with 71% (1.35 MJ) of the 1.9 MJ input laser energy converted into products of D-T fusion reactions, namely neutrons and alpha particles[
Reference Abu-Shawareb, Acree, Adams, Adams, Addis, Aden, Adrian, Afeyan, Aggleton and Aghaian20]. This achievement was soon followed by the first ignition demonstration on 5 December 2022[
Reference Danson and Gizzi19] with 2.05 MJ laser input energy and 3.15 MJ output fusion energy, with 153% gain. The highest current record was reported in July 2023 with 2.2 MJ laser input energy converted to 5.2 MJ output fusion energy with a gain 236% and a total neutron yield well in excess of
${10}^{17}$
neutrons. With this result, the ignition milestone[
282], which requires the fusion energy yield to be equal to or greater than the input laser energy, has been surpassed five times to date[
283], demonstrating unambiguously the validity and feasibility of the ICF concept. This achievement is the result of continuous efforts with a number of experimental campaigns and theoretical developments aimed at tuning some of the many parameters that characterize the NIF design.
It is worth highlighting that laser-driven IFE is relying on similar high-efficiency and high-average-power laser technology that is expected to be needed for the green energy applications considered here. Synergy with the ongoing development of laser drivers for IFE can therefore be established and could significantly reduce the time needed to reach the required TRL.
10. Conclusions
Accelerator-driven subcritical systems are hybrid reactors that can be complementary to conventional reactors, burning long-lived transuranic radionuclides present in LWRs’ spent fuel. They feature increased safety (and therefore better public acceptance of nuclear power), potentially fewer proliferation issues, greatly reduced radioactive waste production and the possibility to use them for transmuting existing nuclear waste. Significant R&D efforts are focusing on the accelerator technologies required to make this concept viable both industrially and economically. Effort is being currently directed towards conventional cyclotrons or linear proton accelerators that are known to be large and expensive. One new concept of the ADS is characterized by the use of novel laser-driven acceleration technology, which has recently been undergoing major development following advances in ultrafast, high-peak-power lasers and plasma-based accelerators.
LPAs provide both proton and electron primary beams at high energy, using different schemes and a range of components, which have mostly already undergone validation in the laboratory with extensive numerical modelling. Using these technologies, an LDADS will feature a number of neutron generation units driven by lasers running at a high repetition rate, ensuring robustness, redundancy for trouble-free operation and flexibility, with enhanced operation of the sub-critical level of the reactor, possibly employing multiple neutron sources, a possibility offered by the multiple sources of the LDADS.
Among the different neutron production mechanisms using these primary beams, namely fusion, spallation and photonuclear process, a trade-off exists between the required laser average power and the current readiness. Laser-driven spallation provides the highest-gain and the highest-risk approach. Once multi-10 PW peak power, rep-rated laser technology is demonstrated, this would require a quarter of a MW average laser power for the production of
${10}^{15}$
neutrons per second. Taking into account the main HW components needed and the maturity of the acceleration mechanism, this approach has a TRL ranging from 2 to 3 (model-based validation). In contrast, the most widely studied and experimentally known process is fusion (or stripping), which offers a much reduced risk. According to the already demonstrated production rates, the necessary average power of the laser systems would be a few MW. This approach has a TRL ranging from 4 to 5 (test in a controlled environment). From a target engineering point of view, the easiest route could be via photo-neutron generation, which is not yet free of experimental risks. Here the required average power is in the 10 MW region. This approach has a TRL ranging from 4 to 5 (test in a controlled environment). It emerges clearly that further studies on optimization of the generation processes may lead to a reduction of the necessary laser average power by an order of magnitude. On the other hand, laser development is concurrently aiming at higher wall-plug efficiency operation compared to the current industry standard, namely a titanium sapphire-based CPA laser with flashlamp-pumped pump lasers. A first step, which is already occurring, is the transition to diode-pumped pump lasers, which is paving the way to kW average power kHz repetition rate operation. Other schemes will be needed to break this barrier, with direct diode-pumping CPA and OPCPA systems, coherently combined fibre lasers and industrial thin-disk lasers with pulse compression. Each of these schemes has its own bottlenecks and critical issues as outlined above. In some cases these issues concern availability of materials (crystals, ceramics), and in others the issues are thermal management, quality, stability and complexity. All of these issues are currently being tackled at different levels in an increasing number of laboratories and laser infrastructures, such as ELI and EuPRAXIA, and solutions are emerging at a fast pace, making the risk related to the laser driver development manageable.
Overall, it emerges clearly from this overview that both intense lasers and plasma acceleration are at their fastest rate of development since their birth, approaching readiness and aiming at delivering sustainable and highly innovative technology for the next generation of high-load particle accelerators. These circumstances are likely to eventually make the LDADS take off and deliver green energy for the next generation.
Acknowledgements
In memory of our co-author, Sydney Galès (1943–2024). We, his co-authors, join together to dedicate this work to Sydney’s outstanding contributions to nuclear physics and to his unique role in bridging laser–plasma and nuclear physics research. His vision, expertise, and generosity as a colleague have left a lasting legacy and continue to inspire the entire community.
The authors acknowledge funding from the EU Horizon 2020 EuPRAXIA Preparatory Phase, under Grant Agreement No. 101079773, and EU Horizon IFAST, under Grant Agreement No. 101004730. This study has been co-funded by the European Union – NextGeneration EU ‘Integrated infrastructure initiative in Photonic and Quantum Sciences’ – I-PHOQS (IR0000016, ID D2B8D520, CUP B53C22001750006) and ‘EuPRAXIA Advanced Photon Sources’ – EuAPS (IR0000030, CUP I93C21000160006). K.O. is grateful for the funding from the National Research, Development, and Innovation Office through the National Laboratory program (contract # NKFIH 877-2/2020, and 476-4/2021).





















