Nuclear imaging of the fuel assembly in ignition experiments

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Abstract

First results from the analysis of neutron image data collected on implosions of cryogenically layered deuterium-tritium capsules during the 2011-2012 National Ignition Campaign are reported. The data span a variety of experimental designs aimed at increasing the stagnation pressure of the central hotspot and areal density of the surrounding fuel assembly. Images of neutrons produced by deuterium-tritium fusion reactions in the hotspot are presented, as well as images of neutrons that scatter in the surrounding dense fuel assembly. The image data are compared with 1D and 2D model predictions, and consistency checked using other diagnostic data. The results indicate that the size of the fusing hotspot is consistent with the model predictions, as well as other imaging data, while the overall size of the fuel assembly, inferred from the scattered neutron images, is systematically smaller than models' prediction. Preliminary studies indicate these differences are consistent with a significant fraction (20%-25%) of the initial deuterium-tritium fuel mass outside the compact fuel assembly, due either to low mode mass asymmetry or high mode 3D mix effects at the ablator-ice interface. © 2013 © 2013 Author(s).

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Grim, G. P., Guler, N., Merrill, F. E., Morgan, G. L., Danly, C. R., Volegov, P. L., … Zylstra, A. (2013). Nuclear imaging of the fuel assembly in ignition experiments. Physics of Plasmas, 20(5). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4807291

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