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Direct comparison of wire, foil, and hybrid X-pinches on a 200 kA, 150 ns current driver

Journal of Applied Physics

Collins, G.W.; Valdivia, M.P.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Conti, F.; Carlson, L.C.; Hammer, D.A.; Elshafiey, A.; Narkis, J.; Beg, F.N.

Wire X-pinches (WXPs) have been studied comprehensively as fast (∼ 1 ns pulse width), small (∼ 1 μm) x-ray sources, created by twisting two or more fine wires into an "X"to produce a localized region of extreme magnetic pressure at the cross-point. Recently, two alternatives to the traditional WXP have arisen: The hybrid X-pinch (HXP), composed of two conical electrodes bridged by a thin wire or capillary, and the laser-cut foil X-pinch (LCXP), cut from a thin foil using a laser. We present a comparison of copper wire, hybrid, and laser-cut foil X-pinches on a single experimental platform: UC San Diego's ∼ 200 kA, 150 ns rise time GenASIS driver. All configurations produced 1-2 ns pulse width, ≤ 5 μm soft x-ray (Cu L-shell, ∼ 1 keV) sources (resolutions diagnostically limited) with comparable fluxes. WXP results varied with linear mass and wire count, but consistently showed separate pinch and electron-beam-driven sources. LCXPs produced the brightest (∼ 1 MW), smallest (≤ 5 μm) Cu K-shell sources, and spectroscopic data showed both H-like Cu K α lines indicative of source temperatures ≥ 2 keV, and cold K α (∼ 8050 eV) characteristic of electron beam generated sources, which were not separately resolved on other diagnostics (within 1-2 ns and ≤ 200 μm). HXPs produced minimal K-shell emission and reliably single, bright, and small L-shell sources after modifications to shape the early current pulse through them. Benefits and drawbacks for each configuration are discussed to provide potential X-pinch users with the information required to choose the configuration best suited to their needs.

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Fast electron transport dynamics and energy deposition in magnetized, imploded cylindrical plasma

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. A, Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences

Kawahito, D K.; Bailly-Grandvaux, M B.; Dozières, M D.; McGuffey, C M.; Forestier-Colleoni, P F.; Peebles, JL P.; Honrbia, JJ H.; Khair, B K.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Tzeferacos, P T.; Wei, MS W.; Krauland, CM K.; Gourdain, P G.; Davies, Peter B.; Matsuo, K M.; Fujioka, S F.; Campbell, ME C.; Santos, JJ S.; J, Batani J.; Bhutwala, K B.; Zhang, S Z.; Beg, FN B.

Inertial confinement fusion approaches involve the creation of high-energy-density states through compression. High gain scenarios may be enabled by the beneficial heating from fast electrons produced with an intense laser and by energy containment with a high-strength magnetic field. Here, we report experimental measurements from a configuration integrating a magnetized, imploded cylindrical plasma and intense laser-driven electrons as well as multi-stage simulations that show fast electrons transport pathways at different times during the implosion and quantify their energy deposition contribution. The experiment consisted of a CH foam cylinder, inside an external coaxial magnetic field of 5 T, that was imploded using 36 OMEGA laser beams. Two-dimensional (2D) hydrodynamic modelling predicts the CH density reaches 9.0 g cm–3, the temperature reaches 920 eV and the external B-field is amplified at maximum compression to 580 T. At pre-determined times during the compression, the intense OMEGA EP laser irradiated one end of the cylinder to accelerate relativistic electrons into the dense imploded plasma providing additional heating. The relativistic electron beam generation was simulated using a 2D particle-in-cell (PIC) code. Finally, three-dimensional hybrid-PIC simulations calculated the electron propagation and energy deposition inside the target and revealed the roles the compressed and self-generated B-fields play in transport. During a time window before the maximum compression time, the self-generated B-field on the compression front confines the injected electrons inside the target, increasing the temperature through Joule heating. For a stronger B-field seed of 20 T, the electrons are predicted to be guided into the compressed target and provide additional collisional heating.

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IMPROVED PERFORMANCE OF MAGNETIZED LINER INERTIAL FUSION EXPERIMENTS WITH HIGH-ENERGY LOW-MIX LASER PREHEAT CONFIGURATIONS

Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Weis, Matthew R.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Ampleford, David A.; Bliss, David E.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Glinsky, Michael E.; Hahn, Kelly D.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Hanson, Joseph C.; Harding, Eric H.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Mangan, Michael M.; Perea, L.; Peterson, Kyle J.; Porter, John L.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Robertson, Grafton K.; Rochau, G.A.; Ruiz, Carlos L.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Shores, Jonathon S.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Smith, Ian C.; Speas, Christopher S.; Whittemore, K.; Paguio, Reny P.; Smith, Gary L.; York, Adam Y.

Abstract not provided.

Narrowband Self-Emission X-ray Imaging of MagLIF Targets on Z

Gomez, Matthew R.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Dunham, Gregory S.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Robertson, Grafton K.; Speas, Christopher S.; Maurer, A.; Ampleford, David A.; Rochau, G.A.; Doron, R.D.; O. Nedostup, E.O.; Stambulchik, Stambulchik; Zarnitsky, Y.Z.; Maron, Y.M.; Paguio, Reny P.; Tomlinson, Kurt T.; Huang, H.H.; Smith, Gary S.; Taylor, Randy T.

Abstract not provided.

Performance Scaling in Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion Experiments

Physical Review Letters

Gomez, Matthew R.; Slutz, S.A.; Jennings, C.A.; Ampleford, David A.; Weis, M.R.; Myers, C.E.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; Hahn, K.D.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Harding, Eric H.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Mangan, M.; Knapp, P.F.; Awe, T.J.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Cooper, Gary W.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Glinsky, Michael E.; Lewis, W.E.; Ruiz, C.L.; Ruiz, D.E.; Savage, Mark E.; Schmit, Paul S.; Smith, Ian C.; Styron, J.D.; Porter, John L.; Jones, Brent M.; Mattsson, Thomas M.; Peterson, Kyle J.; Rochau, G.A.; Sinars, Daniel S.

We present experimental results from the first systematic study of performance scaling with drive parameters for a magnetoinertial fusion concept. In magnetized liner inertial fusion experiments, the burn-averaged ion temperature doubles to 3.1 keV and the primary deuterium-deuterium neutron yield increases by more than an order of magnitude to 1.1×1013 (2 kJ deuterium-tritium equivalent) through a simultaneous increase in the applied magnetic field (from 10.4 to 15.9 T), laser preheat energy (from 0.46 to 1.2 kJ), and current coupling (from 16 to 20 MA). Individual parametric scans of the initial magnetic field and laser preheat energy show the expected trends, demonstrating the importance of magnetic insulation and the impact of the Nernst effect for this concept. A drive-current scan shows that present experiments operate close to the point where implosion stability is a limiting factor in performance, demonstrating the need to raise fuel pressure as drive current is increased. Simulations that capture these experimental trends indicate that another order of magnitude increase in yield on the Z facility is possible with additional increases of input parameters.

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Temperature distributions and gradients in laser-heated plasmas relevant to magnetized liner inertial fusion

Physical Review E

Carpenter, K.R.; Mancini, R.C.; Harding, Eric H.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Weis, M.R.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Peterson, Kyle J.; Rochau, G.A.

We present two-dimensional temperature measurements of magnetized and unmagnetized plasma experiments performed at Z relevant to the preheat stage in magnetized liner inertial fusion. The deuterium gas fill was doped with a trace amount of argon for spectroscopy purposes, and time-integrated spatially resolved spectra and narrow-band images were collected in both experiments. The spectrum and image data were included in two separate multiobjective analysis methods to extract the electron temperature spatial distribution Te(r,z). The results indicate that the magnetic field increases Te, the axial extent of the laser heating, and the magnitude of the radial temperature gradients. Comparisons with simulations reveal that the simulations overpredict the extent of the laser heating and underpredict the temperature. Temperature gradient scale lengths extracted from the measurements also permit an assessment of the importance of nonlocal heat transport.

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Magnetic field impact on the laser heating in MagLIF

Physics of Plasmas

Carpenter, K.R.; Mancini, R.C.; Harding, Eric H.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Weis, M.R.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Peterson, Kyle J.; Rochau, G.A.

Prior to implosion in Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion (MagLIF), the fuel is heated to temperatures on the order of several hundred eV with a multi-kJ, multi-ns laser pulse. We present two laser heated plasma experiments, relevant to the MagLIF preheat stage, performed at Z with beryllium liners filled with deuterium and a trace amount of argon. In one experiment, there is no magnetic field and, in the other, the liner and fuel are magnetized with an 8.5 T axial magnetic field. The recorded time integrated, spatially resolved spectra of the Ar K-shell emission are sensitive to electron temperature Te. Individual analysis of the spatially resolved spectra produces electron temperature distributions Te(z) that are resolved along the axis of laser propagation. In the experiment with magnetic field, the plasma reaches higher temperatures and the heated region extends deeper within the liner than in the unmagnetized case. Radiation magnetohydrodynamics simulations of the experiments are presented and post-processed. A comparison of the results from experimental and simulated data reveals that the simulations underpredict Te in both cases but the differences are larger in the case with magnetic field.

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The Impact on Mix of Different Preheat Protocols

Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Ampleford, David A.; Bliss, David E.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Galloway, B.R.; Glinsky, Michael E.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Hahn, K.D.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Harding, Eric H.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Perea, L.; Peterson, Kara J.; Porter, John L.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Robertson, Grafton K.; Rochau, G.A.; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Shores, Jonathon S.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Smith, Ian C.; Speas, Christopher S.; Whittemore, K.; Woodbury, Daniel W.; Smith, G.E.

Abstract not provided.

Progress in Implementing High-Energy Low-Mix Laser Preheat for MagLIF

Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Weis, Matthew R.; Ampleford, David A.; Ampleford, David A.; Bliss, David E.; Bliss, David E.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Galloway, B.R.; Galloway, B.R.; Glinsky, Michael E.; Glinsky, Michael E.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Hahn, K.D.; Hahn, K.D.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Harding, Eric H.; Harding, Eric H.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Kimmel, Mark W.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Perea, L.; Perea, L.; Peterson, Kara J.; Peterson, Kara J.; Porter, John L.; Porter, John L.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Robertson, Grafton K.; Robertson, Grafton K.; Rochau, G.A.; Rochau, G.A.; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Schwarz, Jens S.; Shores, Jonathon S.; Shores, Jonathon S.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Sinars, Daniel S.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Smith, Ian C.; Smith, Ian C.; Speas, Christopher S.; Speas, Christopher S.; Whittemore, K.; Whittemore, K.; Woodbury, Daniel W.; Woodbury, Daniel W.; Smith, G.E.; Smith, G.E.

Abstract not provided.

Stagnation performance scaling of Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion

Gomez, Matthew R.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; Myers, Clayton E.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Geissel, Matthias G.; Knapp, Patrick K.; Harding, Eric H.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Mangan, Michael M.; Ruiz, Carlos L.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Webb, Timothy J.; Moore, Thomas M.; Laity, George R.; Ampleford, David A.; Peterson, Kyle J.; Rochau, G.A.; Sinars, Daniel S.

Abstract not provided.

Results 26–50 of 303
Results 26–50 of 303