Modified IS (Iranian Sun) plasma focus (10 kJ,15 kV, 94 mu F, 0.1 Hz) has been used to produce the short-lived radioisotope N-13 (half-life of 9.97 min) through C-12(d,n)N-13 nuclear reaction. The filling gas was 1.5-3 torr of hydrogen (60%) deuterium (40%) mixture. The target was solid nuclear grade graphite with 5 mm thick, 9 cm width and 13 in length. The activations of the exogenous target on average of 20 shots (only one-third acceptable) through 10-13 kV produced the 511 keV gamma rays. Another peak found at the 570 keV gamma of which both was measured by a NaI portable gamma spectrometer calibrated by a Cs-137 0.25 mu Ci sealed reference source with its single line at 661.65 keV and Na-22 0.1 mu Ci at 511 keV. To measure the gamma rays, the graphite target converts to three different phases; solid graphite, powder graphite, and powder graphite in water solution. The later phase approximately has a doubled activity with respect to the solid graphite target up to 0.5 mu Ci of 511 keV and 1.1 mu Ci of 570 keV gamma lines were produced. This increment in activity was perhaps due to structural transformation of graphite powder to nano-particles characteristic in liquid water.