Time-dependent nuclear measurements of fuel-shell mix in ICF implosions at OMEGA

COFFEE_KLATCH  · Invited

Abstract

Fuel-shell mix remains a pivotal concern in inertial confinement fusion (ICF), as it can preclude ignition. Mix is the result of saturation of Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) instability growth at a density interface that leads to small-scale, turbulent eddies and atomic-level mixing of cool, high-density fuel in the shell with hot, low-density fuel in the core. If sufficient mixing occurs, it will disrupt the formation of the ``hot-spot'' required for ignition. To sensitively probe the evolution and extent of mix in spherical implosions, the time dependence of the D$^{3}$He nuclear reaction rate was measured from implosions of capsules filled with pure $^{3}$He. The capsule shell was comprised of a 1-$\mu$m layer of CD inside a 19-$\mu$m layer of CH. Nuclear burn will only occur in such capsules if there is sufficient mixing of D from the shell with hot $^{3}$He in the core. By utilizing novel D$^{3}$He reaction-rate and proton spectrometers, all sensitive to the 14.7 MeV D$^{3}$He protons, a comprehensive, time dependent picture of mix was constructed. Important qualitative features were immediately evident: first, the shock burn of D$^{3}$He, always present for gas fills of D$^{3}$He, was absent, enabling a strong limit to be set on the amount and extent of D penetration into the $^{3}$He. Second, the time necessary for RT instabilities to induce mix and to be heated by the hot core resulted in a 90 ps delay in the D$^{3}$He bang time as compared to bang time for implosions with D$^{3}$He fills. And third, when the gas pressure of $^{3}$He was reduced from 20 to 4 atm, the extent of mix was enhanced by about a factor of 5. \newline \newline This work was supported in part by LLE, LLNL, the U.S. DoE, and the N.Y. State Energy Research and Development Authority.

*In collaboration with J. A. Frenje, C. K. Li, F. H. S\'{e}guin, and R. D. Petrasso (MIT), and J. A. Delettrez, V. Yu. Glebov, V. N. Goncharov, D. D. Meyerhofer, P. B. Radha, S. P. Regan, T. C. Sangster, and C. Stoeckl (LLE).

Authors

  • J. Ryan Rygg

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology