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.BM9.6
Abstract: BM9.00006 : Staged Z-pinch for Fusion, Experiment and Simulation*
11:10 AM–11:30 AM
Presenter:
Hafiz ur Rahman
(Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technology Inc.)
Authors:
Hafiz ur Rahman
(Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technology Inc.)
Emil Ruskov
(Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technology Inc.)
Paul Ney
(Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technology Inc.)
David Reisman
(Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technology Inc.)
Jeff Narkis
(University of California, San Diego)
Fabio Conti
(University of California, San Diego)
Julio Valenzuela
(University of California, San Diego)
Nicholas Aybar
(University of California, San Diego)
Farhat N Beg
(University of California, San Diego)
Eric Dutra
(Natl Security Technologies LLC)
Aaron Covington
(University of Nevada, Reno)
The Staged Z-pinch is a magneto-inertial fusion concept in which a high-Z liner implodes onto a D or DT target. Initial target heating is provided by a shock launched from the interface due to ram & magnetic pressures. The contribution of magnetic pressure has been shown in numerical studies to increase with higher-Z. Axial magnetic flux frozen into plasma does not behave self-similarly and this relaxes the required initial field strength to sufficiently mitigate MRT growth. This is supported by both experimental data on the 1-MA Zebra and MHD simulations of MACH2 and HYDRA, which shows good agreement with experiment in terms of implosion dynamics, convergence, and neutron yield. From simulation, the average stagnation ion density and temperature is 5.0x1020 cm-3 and 6KeV, respectively. We observed consistent neutron yield of ~ 1.0x1010 , convergence ratio of 8-12 and peak implosion velocity exceeds 400 km/s. We expect to achieve comparable target stagnation conditions on LTD-III, a linear transformer driver that stores much less energy than Zebra, but couples comparable energy to the load. We will also present a scaling study of LTD-III for higher current(7-10MA) and discuss a conceptual design of a modular LTD machine.
*This work was funded by ARPA-E, grant DE-AR0000569.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.DPP.BM9.6
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