58th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 61, Number 18
Monday–Friday, October 31–November 4 2016;
San Jose, California
Session NI2: Stix Award and ICF: Implosion Stagnation
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Wednesday, November 2, 2016
Room: 210 CDGH
Chair: Sean Regan, University of Rochester
Abstract ID: BAPS.2016.DPP.NI2.4
Abstract: NI2.00004 : Backlighting Direct-Drive Cryogenic DT Implosions on OMEGA
11:00 AM–11:30 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
C. Stoeckl
(Laboratory for Laser Energetics,U. of Rochester)
X-ray backlighting has been frequently used to measure the in-flight
characteristics of an imploding shell in both direct- and indirect-drive
inertial confinement fusion implosions. These measurements provide unique
insight into the early time and stagnation stages of an implosion and guide
the modeling efforts to improve the target designs. Backlighting a layered
DT implosion on OMEGA is a particular challenge because the opacity of the
DT shell is low, the shell velocity is high, the size and wall thickness of
the shell is small, and the self-emission from the hot core at the onset of
burn is exceedingly bright. A framing-camera--based crystal imaging system
with a Si He$_{\alpha }$ backlighter at $\sim 1.865\mbox{\thinspace keV}$
driven by 10-ps short pulses from OMEGA EP was developed to meet these
radiography challenges. A fast target inserter was developed to accurately
place the Si backlighter foil at a distance of 5 mm to the implosion target
following the removal of the cryogenic shroud and an ultra-stable triggering
system was implemented to reliably trigger the framing camera coincident
with the arrival of the OMEGA EP pulse. This talk will report on a series of
implosions in which the DT shell is imaged for a range of convergence ratios
and in-flight aspect ratios. The images acquired have been analyzed for
low-mode shape variations, the DT shell thickness, the level of ablator
mixing into the DT fuel (even 0.1{\%} of carbon mix can be reliably
inferred), the areal density of the DT shell, and the impact of the support
stalk. The measured implosion performance will be compared with hydrodynamic
simulations that include imprint (up to mode 200), cross-beam energy
transfer, nonlocal thermal transport, and initial low-mode perturbations
such as power imbalance and target misalignment. This material is based upon
work supported by the Department of Energy National Nuclear Security
Administration under Award Number DE-NA0001944.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2016.DPP.NI2.4