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Observation of early shell-dopant mix in OMEGA direct-drive implosions and comparisons with radiation-hydrodynamic simulations

Authors :
Peter Hakel
Natalia Krasheninnikova
Ian L. Tregillis
Roberto Mancini
K.D. Obrey
Daniel Mayes
Mark J. Schmitt
Steven H. Batha
H. M. Johns
Paul A. Bradley
Scott Hsu
J. A. Cobble
T. Joshi
J. A. Baumgaertel
T. Nagayama
Thomas J. Murphy
R. C. Shah
Source :
Physics of Plasmas. 21:052706
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
AIP Publishing, 2014.

Abstract

Temporally, spatially, and spectrally resolved x-ray image data from direct-drive implosions on OMEGA were interpreted with the aid of radiation-hydrodynamic simulations. Neither clean calculations nor those using a turbulent mix model can explain fully the observed migration of shell-dopant material (titanium) into the core. Shell-dopant migration was observed via time-dependent, spatially integrated spectra, and spatially and spectrally resolved x-ray images of capsule implosions and resultant dopant emissions. The titanium emission was centrally peaked in narrowband x-ray images. In post-processed clean simulations, the peak titanium emission forms in a ring in self-emission images as the capsule implodes. Post-processed simulations with mix reproduce trends in time-dependent, spatially integrated spectra, as well having centrally peaked Ti emission in synthetic multiple monochromatic imager. However, mix simulations still do not transport Ti to the core as is observed in the experiment. This suggests that phenomena in addition to the turbulent mix must be responsible for the transport of Ti. Simple diffusion estimates are unable to explain the early Ti mix into the core. Mechanisms suggested for further study are capsule surface roughness, illumination non-uniformity, and shock entrainment.

Details

ISSN :
10897674 and 1070664X
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics of Plasmas
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6f9974bf9bd904d56654a57a867f7d76
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4881463