Direct-drive Energetics of laser-Heated Foam Liners for Hohlraums
ORAL
Abstract
Lining the walls of a high-Z hohlraum cavity with a low-density foam is predicted to mitigate the challenge presented by hohlraum wall expansion. Once heated, wall material quickly fills the cavity and can impede laser beam propagation. To avoid this, ignition hohlraums are typically filled with a gas or irradiated with a short ($<$ 10 ns) laser pulse. A gas-fill has the disadvantage that it can cause laser plasma instabilities (LPI), while a short laser pulse limits the design space to reach low-adiabat implosions. Foam-liners offer a potential route to reduce wall motion in a low gas-fill hohlraum with little LPI. Results from quasi 1-D experiments performed at the NIF are presented These characterize the x-ray conversion efficiency, backscattered laser energy and heat propagation in a 250$\mu$m thick Ta$_2$O$_5$ or ZnO foam-liners spanning a range of densities from underdense to overdense, when irradiated at up to 4.9 x 10$^{14}$ W/cm$^2$ is incident on a planar foam sample, backed by a Au foil and generates a radiation temperature of up to 240eV - conditions equivalent to a single outer cone beam-spot in an ignition hohlraum.
*This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.
–