Diagnosing reaction-in-flight DT neutrons produced in burning plasmas at the National Ignition Facility
ORAL
Abstract
In the quest to exceed ignition at inertial confinement fusion (ICF) facilities, two critical quantities to diagnose are: 𝛼-heat deposition that can improve, and impurities mixed into the plasma that can limit performance. In high-density, highly-collisional ICF burning plasmas there is a significant probability that deuterium-tritium (DT) fusion products, 14 MeV neutrons and 3.5 MeV 𝛼 particles, will collide with and deposit energy onto surrounding DT fuel ions. These up-scattered ions can then undergo fusion while in- flight and produce higher energy neutrons (15-30 MeV). The resulting reaction-in-flight (RIF) neutrons can be uniquely identified in the measured neutron energy spectrum. The magnitude and shape of this spectral feature can inform on the stopping-power of the DT plasma and hence is directly proportional to 𝛼-heat deposition. In addition, the RIF spectrum can be related to mix into the burning fuel, particularly relevant for high-Z shell and other emerging target platforms at ICF facilities, such as the National Ignition Facility (NIF). The requisites for the neutron time-of-flight diagnostics at the NIF to obtain this small signal, ~10-5 times the primary DT neutron peak, will be discussed. Results from several Gain > 1 implosions will be compared to previous RIF spectra with marginal burn. Finally, comparisons of experimental data to a computational model will be made.
*This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.LLNL-ABS-866123
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Publication: Submitted manuscript to Review of Scientific Instruments.
Title: "Diagnosing up-scattered DT neutrons produced in burning plasmas at the National Ignition Facility" (Invited).
Presenters
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Justin Jeet
- Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab