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Precision shock tuning on the national ignition facility.

Authors :
Robey HF
Celliers PM
Kline JL
Mackinnon AJ
Boehly TR
Landen OL
Eggert JH
Hicks D
Le Pape S
Farley DR
Bowers MW
Krauter KG
Munro DH
Jones OS
Milovich JL
Clark D
Spears BK
Town RP
Haan SW
Dixit S
Schneider MB
Dewald EL
Widmann K
Moody JD
Döppner TD
Radousky HB
Nikroo A
Kroll JJ
Hamza AV
Horner JB
Bhandarkar SD
Dzenitis E
Alger E
Giraldez E
Castro C
Moreno K
Haynam C
LaFortune KN
Widmayer C
Shaw M
Jancaitis K
Parham T
Holunga DM
Walters CF
Haid B
Malsbury T
Trummer D
Coffee KR
Burr B
Berzins LV
Choate C
Brereton SJ
Azevedo S
Chandrasekaran H
Glenzer S
Caggiano JA
Knauer JP
Frenje JA
Casey DT
Johnson MG
Séguin FH
Young BK
Edwards MJ
Van Wonterghem BM
Kilkenny J
MacGowan BJ
Atherton J
Lindl JD
Meyerhofer DD
Moses E
Source :
Physical review letters [Phys Rev Lett] 2012 May 25; Vol. 108 (21), pp. 215004. Date of Electronic Publication: 2012 May 24.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Ignition implosions on the National Ignition Facility [J. D. Lindl et al., Phys. Plasmas 11, 339 (2004)] are underway with the goal of compressing deuterium-tritium fuel to a sufficiently high areal density (ρR) to sustain a self-propagating burn wave required for fusion power gain greater than unity. These implosions are driven with a very carefully tailored sequence of four shock waves that must be timed to very high precision to keep the fuel entropy and adiabat low and ρR high. The first series of precision tuning experiments on the National Ignition Facility, which use optical diagnostics to directly measure the strength and timing of all four shocks inside a hohlraum-driven, cryogenic liquid-deuterium-filled capsule interior have now been performed. The results of these experiments are presented demonstrating a significant decrease in adiabat over previously untuned implosions. The impact of the improved shock timing is confirmed in related deuterium-tritium layered capsule implosions, which show the highest fuel compression (ρR~1.0 g/cm(2)) measured to date, exceeding the previous record [V. Goncharov et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 104, 165001 (2010)] by more than a factor of 3. The experiments also clearly reveal an issue with the 4th shock velocity, which is observed to be 20% slower than predictions from numerical simulation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1079-7114
Volume :
108
Issue :
21
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physical review letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23003273
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.215004