Bulletin of the American Physical Society
60th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 63, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 5–9, 2018; Portland, Oregon
Session BM9: Mini-Conference on Magneto-inertial Fusion Science and Technology I
9:30 AM–11:50 AM,
Monday, November 5, 2018
OCC
Room: C123
Chair: Kyle Peterson, Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.DPP.BM9.3
Abstract: BM9.00003 : Observation and analysis of thermonuclear neutron production in a sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch
10:10 AM–10:30 AM
Presenter:
Elliot L Claveau
(Univ of Washington)
Authors:
Elliot L Claveau
(Univ of Washington)
Uri Shumlak
(Univ of Washington)
Eleanor G Forbes
(Univ of Washington)
Raymond Golingo
(Univ of Washington)
Brian A Nelson
(Univ of Washington)
Anton Stepanov
(Univ of Washington)
Tobin R Weber
(Univ of Washington)
Yue Zhang
(Univ of Washington)
Harry Scott McLean
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Drew P Higginson
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
James M Mitrani
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Sustained neutron production has been demonstrated on the Fusion Z-pinch Experiment (FuZE), a sheared-flow-stabilized Z-pinch device. Measurements indicate that neutron production is primarily the result of thermonuclear processes. FuZE produces 0.3 cm radius by 50 cm long Z-pinches using D2/H2 or D2/He fill gas mixtures, with up to 20% D2. The plasma columns are magnetically compressed by a 200 kA plasma current, resulting in 1 - 2 keV ion temperatures and >1017 cm-3 densities, during a 20 μs quiescent period when magnetic fluctuations are diminished. The Z-pinch plasmas are stabilized by an embedded radially-sheared axial flow, a method proposed in Shumlak and Hartman PRL 1995 and demonstrated experimentally in other sheared flow stabilized Z-pinch devices, ZaP and ZaP-HD. Within the quiescent period, sustained neutron production is observed for a duration of approximately 5 μs, hundreds of times longer than the 20 ns instability growth time for a static Z-pinch at FuZE plasma parameters. The measured neutron yield is >105 neutrons/pulse, agreeing with predictions from D-D fusion reaction rates. The number of observed counts scales with the square of the deuterium concentration, suggesting a thermonuclear fusion process.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DPP.BM9.3
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