Thermal transport modeling of laser-irradiated spheres

ORAL

Abstract

In laser-fusion plasmas, classical Spitzer-Harm (SH) local thermal conduction is often used. A flux limiter is employed as an ad hoc fix to reduce the heat flux to more physical levels when the mean-free-paths of the heat flux carrying electrons is comparable to the temperature gradient scale length. This work studies the effect of non-local electron transport in the plasma corona surrounding direct-drive spheres at laser intensities ranging from $10^{14}-10^{15}$ W/cm$^{2}$. In order to highlight the thermal transport modeling, we consider low- to mid-Z materials (Be, Al, Cu), for which non-LTE kinetics are easier and less impactful on observables. One-dimensional spherical radiation-hydrodynamics simulations of the proposed experiments are performed using HYDRA. The thermal transport is modeled using the recently updated Schurtz-Nicolai-Busquet (SNB) reduced-order nonlocal model[1][2]. The HYDRA-SNB model exhibits good agreement with Vlasov-Fokker-Planck modeling, while bot h differ from SH transport, where differences in the thermal heat fluxes lead to hotter coronal electron temperatures.\\ $[1]$Brodrick et al., Phys. Plas. 24, 092309 (2017)\\ $[2]$Schurtz et al., Phys. Plas. 7, 4238 (2000)

*Funded by LLNL under subcontract B632749, and the U.S. DOE by LLNL under Contract No. DE-AC52-07NA27344 and U.S. DOE NNSA Center of Excellence under grant no. DE-NA0003869.

Authors

  • K.H. Ma

    • University of Michigan
  • Mehul V. Patel

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
    • Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
    • LLNL
  • William Farmer

    • LLNL
    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
    • Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
  • Mark Sherlock

    • Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
    • Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
    • Lawrence Livermore National Lab
    • LLNL
  • Eric Johnsen

    • University of Michigan