57th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 60, Number 19
Monday–Friday, November 16–20, 2015;
Savannah, Georgia
Session YP12: Poster Session IX (Supplemental and Postdeadline)
Friday, November 20, 2015
Room: Exhibit Hall A
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.DPP.YP12.51
Abstract: YP12.00051 : Study of an indirect-drive ignition capsule with the main pulse shape of decompression and recompression
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Authors:
Wenhua Ye
(Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics)
Lifeng Wang
(Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics)
Junfeng Wu
(Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics)
Wenyi Huo
(Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics)
Ke Lan
(Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics)
Jie Liu
(Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics)
Xian Tu He
(Institute of Applied Physics and Computational Mathematics)
Hydrodynamics in the low-foot (LF) implosion$^{\mathrm{\thinspace
[1][2]\thinspace }}$during the National Ignition Campaign is highly
nonlinearity, which results in significant amount of CH(Si) ablator material
mixing into the hot spot and low-mode non-uniformity of the shell areal
density. The high-foot (HF) implosion $^{\mathrm{[3]}}$after the NIC largely
suppresses mediate- and high- mode hydrodynamic instabilities, in which
neutron yields go up an order of magnitude compared to the LF implosion, but
the hot spot pressure is still low and the hot spot shape goes bad when the
peak power is increased for larger implosion velocity$^{\mathrm{[4][5]}}$.
In our new ignition capsule design$^{\mathrm{[6]}}$, first, the HF prepulse
similar to the HF implosion on NIF is adopted for resisting the CH(Si)
ablator mix problem; second, the new main pulse shape of decompression and
recompression (DR) is proposed to improve performance of the HF implosion on
NIF. In this scheme of the DR, the secondary auxiliary shock (SAS) is
produced during the late of the main pulse by the recompression pulse to
raise the shell density for improving the hot spot pressure. The
decompression pulse is used for reducing ablative pressure in order to relax
the limit of the peak drive power for SAS production. The SAS colliding with
the rebound shock from the center also improves the hot spot pressure and
temperature, which is very useful to stabilize the hydrodynamic
instabilities during the deceleration stage of implosion for the hot spot
ignition. Decompressing the outer part of the ablator thickens the shell to
lessen feed-through of perturbations from the ablative to inner interfaces.
In this presentation, good 1D and 2D performance of implosion of the DR
scheme is reported, especially reduced growth of perturbations at the
interface between the hot spot and the main DT fuel.
[1] J.Lindl, O. Landen, J. Edwards, E. moses, and NIC team, Phys. Plasmas
21,020501(2014).
[2] M. J. Edwards, P. K. Patel, J. D. Lindl ea al, Phys. Plasmas 20, 070501.
[3] O. A. Hurricane, D. A. Callahan, D. T. Casey et al, Nature (London) 506,
343(2014).
[4] T. Doppner, D. A. Callahan, O. A. Hurricane et al, Phys. Rev. Lett 115,
055001(2015).
[5] T. Ma, O. A. Hurricane, D. A. Callahan ea al, Phys. Rev. Lett 114,
145004(2015).
[6] Wang Li-Feng, WU Jun-Feng, YE Wen-Hua, FAN Zheng-Feng, HE Xian-Tu,
Design of an Indirect-Drive pulse shape for $\sim $1.6MJ inertial
confinement fusion ignition capsules, CHIN. PHYS. LETT. 31(4), 045201(2014).
ye\textunderscore wenhua@iapcm.ac.cn
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.DPP.YP12.51