On the onset of kinetic effects in ICF implosions

ORAL

Abstract

Central hot spot ignition requires the careful sequencing of several shocks that coalesce in the gaseous deuterium-tritium fuel to form a high Mach number shock. Near the instant of shock convergence at the origin (or ``shock flash''), the ion mean free path may be a significant fraction of the hot spot radius, leading to a potential violation of the fluid approximation that generally underlies mainline radiation-hydrodynamic simulation tools. Understanding this physical regime may have consequences on subsequent hot spot formation and ignition performance margins. Recent data obtained on the Omega laser facility point to a transition in direct-drive exploding pusher implosion behavior below a threshold pressure where the ion mean free path is on the order of the fuel radius at shock flash [1]. Adaptation of a Guderley-type shock solution in a converging geometry to include finite mean-free-path effects is undertaken to understand this kinetic regime. \\[4pt] [1] Courtesy of M. Rosenberg, Ph.D. candidate

*This work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, and supported by LDRD-11-ERD-075 (LLNL) and NLUF/DOE DE-NA0002035 (MIT).

Authors

  • Peter Amendt

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
    • LLNL
  • Claudio Bellei

    • LLNL
    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  • Scott Wilks

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
    • LLNL
  • Chikang Li

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • PSFC, MIT
  • Hans Rinderknecht

    • PSFC, MIT
  • Michael Rosenberg

    • PSFC, MIT
  • Hong Sio

    • MIT
    • PSFC, MIT
  • Richard Petrasso

    • PSFC, MIT