scholarly journals Developing one-dimensional implosions for inertial confinement fusion science

Author(s):  
J. L. Kline ◽  
S. A. Yi ◽  
A. N. Simakov ◽  
R. E. Olson ◽  
D. C. Wilson ◽  
...  

Experiments on the National Ignition Facility show that multi-dimensional effects currently dominate the implosion performance. Low mode implosion symmetry and hydrodynamic instabilities seeded by capsule mounting features appear to be two key limiting factors for implosion performance. One reason these factors have a large impact on the performance of inertial confinement fusion implosions is the high convergence required to achieve high fusion gains. To tackle these problems, a predictable implosion platform is needed meaning experiments must trade-off high gain for performance. LANL has adopted three main approaches to develop a one-dimensional (1D) implosion platform where 1D means measured yield over the 1D clean calculation. A high adiabat, low convergence platform is being developed using beryllium capsules enabling larger case-to-capsule ratios to improve symmetry. The second approach is liquid fuel layers using wetted foam targets. With liquid fuel layers, the implosion convergence can be controlled via the initial vapor pressure set by the target fielding temperature. The last method is double shell targets. For double shells, the smaller inner shell houses the DT fuel and the convergence of this cavity is relatively small compared to hot spot ignition. However, double shell targets have a different set of trade-off versus advantages. Details for each of these approaches are described.

Author(s):  
R. W. Paddock ◽  
H. Martin ◽  
R. T. Ruskov ◽  
R. H. H. Scott ◽  
W. Garbett ◽  
...  

Indirect drive inertial confinement fusion experiments with convergence ratios below 17 have been previously shown to be less susceptible to Rayleigh–Taylor hydrodynamic instabilities, making this regime highly interesting for fusion science. Additional limitations imposed on the implosion velocity, in-flight aspect ratio and applied laser power aim to further reduce instability growth, resulting in a new regime where performance can be well represented by one-dimensional (1D) hydrodynamic simulations. A simulation campaign was performed using the 1D radiation-hydrodynamics code HYADES to investigate the performance that could be achieved using direct-drive implosions of liquid layer capsules, over a range of relevant energies. Results include potential gains of 0.19 on LMJ-scale systems and 0.75 on NIF-scale systems, and a reactor-level gain of 54 for an 8.5 MJ implosion. While the use of 1D simulations limits the accuracy of these results, they indicate a sufficiently high level of performance to warrant further investigations and verification of this new low-instability regime. This potentially suggests an attractive new approach to fusion energy. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Prospects for high gain inertial fusion energy (part 2)’.


2020 ◽  
Vol 27 (8) ◽  
pp. 082702 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. V. Young ◽  
L. Masse ◽  
D. T. Casey ◽  
B. J. MacGowan ◽  
O. L. Landen ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 128-134 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason W. Bates ◽  
Andrew J. Schmitt ◽  
David E. Fyfe ◽  
Steve P. Obenschain ◽  
Steve T. Zalesak

2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 032713
Author(s):  
Dongguo Kang ◽  
Huasen Zhang ◽  
Shiyang Zou ◽  
Wudi Zheng ◽  
Shaoping Zhu ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 25 (12) ◽  
pp. 3123-3126
Author(s):  
滕建 Teng Jian ◽  
谷渝秋 Gu Yuqiu ◽  
朱斌 Zhu Bin ◽  
谭放 Tan Fang ◽  
田超 Tian Chao ◽  
...  

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