61st Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 64, Number 11
Monday–Friday, October 21–25, 2019;
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Session CT3: Tutorial: Progress Toward Ignition in Indirect-Drive Inertial Confinement Fusion at the NIF
2:00 PM–3:00 PM,
Monday, October 21, 2019
Room: Floridian Ballroom CD
Chair: Denise Hinkel, LLNL
Abstract ID: BAPS.2019.DPP.CT3.1
Abstract: CT3.00001 : Progress towards achieving ignition on the National Ignition Facility
2:00 PM–3:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Pravesh Patel
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Achieving controlled thermonuclear fusion in the laboratory represents a
decades-long scientific and technical challenge. The National Ignition
Facility, a 1.8 MJ 192-beam fusion-class laser provides the means to pursue
this challenge via the process of inertial confinement fusion. Since
experiments began in 2009 considerable progress has been made in
understanding and overcoming the obstacles to achieving ignition. The
performance of cryogenic deuterium-tritium (DT) implosions has steadily
increased to a point where self-heating of the hot-spot by fusion-generated
alpha-particles now almost exceeds the compressive heating of the implosion
itself. In current experiments plasma conditions have reached temperatures
of 4.7 $+$/-0.2 keV, fuel areal densities of 0.28 $+$/-0.03
g/cm$^{\mathrm{2}}$, and stagnation pressures of 360 $+$/-30 Gbar.
Alpha-particle self-heating of the hot-spot is estimated to be boosting the
total DT fusion output by a factor of 3x. Further improvements are still
needed, however, to close the remaining gap to runaway self-heating and
ignition. A simple measure for the proximity of current implosions to
ignition is given by the no-burn Lawson parameter, or pressure-confinement
time product (P$\tau )$, and estimates are that we need to increase P$\tau $
by 30{\%} to reach the threshold for ignition. Identifying the physical
mechanisms currently degrading performance and quantifying the improvements
needed to recover this deficit are crucial to making continued progress.
This tutorial will review the progress made in the experimental campaigns to
date, in improved diagnostic techniques enabling us to characterize
implosion conditions with unprecedented precision, and in the significant
advances in large-scale computational modeling capabilities. We will discuss
the major remaining challenges, and the further improvements expected to be
needed to achieve ignition.
This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy
by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2019.DPP.CT3.1