Abstract

Summary form only given. Pulsed power systems traditionally have been designed to provide a pulse that is nonprogrammable or requires hardware modifications to adjust the output shape. Advancements in pulsed power technologies are enabling system designs that allow for greater flexibility such as programmable current shaping. Much of this work is being driven by needs in material science which use current pulse shaping to obtain data for material equation of state analysis. Programming of pulsed power systems through the use of a simulation and a manual curve fitting approach can work well for systems that only have a few controllable parameters. More complex systems that have many controllable parameters become unmanageable from a manual trial-and-error perspective. This paper discusses an approach to the optimization of a current adder output through the use of genetic algorithms. The approach to system programmability presented herein will allow for more a simplified user interface and system control as the requirements for flexibility and complexity for systems of the future increase.

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