62nd Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics
Volume 65, Number 11
Monday–Friday, November 9–13, 2020;
Remote; Time Zone: Central Standard Time, USA
Session TI01: Invited: Simulations
9:30 AM–12:30 PM,
Thursday, November 12, 2020
Chair: Nat Fisch, PPPL
Abstract: TI01.00005 : Understanding the Fusion Yield and All of Its Dependencies Using Statistical Modeling of Experimental Data
11:30 AM–12:00 PM
Live
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Aarne Lees
(University of Rochester)
Statistical modeling of experimental and simulation databases has enabled
the development of an accurate predictive capability for OMEGA DT layered
implosions, leading to new target designs and record fusion yields,
threefold higher than previously achieved.[V. Gopalaswamy et al., Nature
565, 581 (2019)] In addition to enhancements in fusion performance, a new
application of statistical modeling has been devised to greatly improve our
understanding of the underlying physics, various dependencies, and all
degradation mechanisms affecting the fusion yield of OMEGA implosions. Since
the statistical framework relates the outputs of 1-D simulations to
experimental results, a judicious choice of simulation outputs can identify
and quantitatively assess the different dependencies and degradation
mechanisms. Each dependency is validated by comparison with trends in 3-D
simulations. We find that the yield is reduced by four factors: the ratio of
laser beam to target radius (a proxy for laser beam geometry mode); the
variance of inferred ion temperatures (a proxy for l $=$ 1 mode from offset
and mispointing); the time span over which the tritium fuel has decayed (a
proxy for tritium damage and 3He buildup, subsequently included in codes as
a result of this work); and the normalized pulse length [Tpulse/(R/Vimp)],
related to the in-flight aspect ratio (a proxy for the growth of short
wavelength modes from sources like laser imprinting).
We find that the degradation from beam geometry illumination nonuniformity
is greater than predicted by 3-D simulations and accounts for 30{\%} to
40{\%} reduction in yield in best-performing implosions. The degradation
from short wavelength modes limits the yield at convergence higher than best
performers. The degradation from DT-fill age is significant, and is
mitigated by reducing fill-to-shot time to under three days. The l $=$ 1
mode is only important when Ti asymmetries exceed 10{\%}. This material is
based upon work supported by the Department of Energy National Nuclear
Security Administration under Award Number DE-NA0003856.