Advancing Compression in Large-Scale HDC-Based Ablator Implosions Through Modified Drive and Capsule Profiles
ORAL
Abstract
Target gain greater than unity has been achieved for the first time in inertial fusion experiments [Abu-Shawareb et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 132, 065102 (2024)]. However, the fuel burn-up fraction remains at only about one-fourth of ideal estimates due to limited areal density, indicating the potential for greater gain through increased compression. Efforts to enhance compression using high-density carbon (HDC) ablator implosions have been hindered by hydrodynamic instability growth.
Recently, a series of experiments at the National Ignition Facility [Spaeth et al., Fusion Science and Technology 69, 25 (2016)] using a gently ramped "SQ-n" pulse [Clark et al., Physics of Plasmas 29, 052710 (2022)] and a modified HDC ablator profile has resulted in the highest areal densities achieved to date, with up to a 30% increase in compression, attributed to reduced fuel-ablator mixing and lower adiabat compared to previous designs. [Tommasini et al., Physical Review Research 5, L042034 (2023)]
Here, we report on applying this design to larger-scale implosions, using a 1050 µm inner radius capsule in a 6.4mm x 11.2mm hohlraum, to test the physics and the limits of compression of the combination of the ramped pulse and the modified ablator profile on DT fuel in the burn-wave propagation regime. The results suggest a significant potential for increasing fuel areal density in larger-scale implosions, as predicted by simulations. This marks a significant advancement in efforts to achieve much higher gains.
*This work was performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.
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Publication:Clark et al., "Exploring implosion designs for increased compression on the national ignition facility using high density carbon ablators," Physics of Plasmas 29, 052710 (2022) Weber et al., "Reduced mixing in inertial confinement fusion with early-time interface acceleration," Physical Review E 108, L023202 (2023 Tommasini et al., "Increased compression in HDC-based ablator implosions using modified drive profile," Physical Review Research 5, L042034 (2023) Tommasini et al., "High-compression HDC-based ablator implosions using modified drive and capsule profile", submitted