Understanding and controlling capsule symmetry in near vacuum hohlraums at the National Ignition Facility

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Abstract

The near vacuum hohlraum platform is an inertial confinement fusion design at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) that uses the lowest practical density of helium gas of 30 μg/cc to fill the hohlraum, which is ten times lower than now used routinely. This has several advantages, such as high laser coupling; however, the inability to understand and simulate the symmetry of the imploded capsule has limited the use of this platform. This work presents the first simulations that are able to accurately capture the highly prolate implosion seen experimentally without unphysical, ad hoc model changes. While previous investigations attributed this asymmetry to multi-species interpenetration in the hohlraum, we find that this alone has little effect on symmetry. Instead, it is the presence of crossed-beam energy transfer (CBET), occurring with no applied wavelength shift between the laser beams, that increases the laser power to the inner cones and causes a more prolate implosion. The effect of CBET is increased in the simulation model when the hohlraum laser entrance hole hardware is included. Using this understanding, CBET is exploited by shifting the inner-beam wavelength by -0.75 Å (at 1ω) with respect to the outer-beams. This transfers laser power to the outer-beams in contrast to positive wavelength shifts as done routinely on NIF and produces a round capsule implosion in our simulations. This work shows the possibility of the near vacuum hohlraum as a viable experimental platform.

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Higginson, D. P., Strozzi, D. J., Bailey, D., Maclaren, S. A., Meezan, N. B., Wilks, S. C., & Zimmerman, G. (2022). Understanding and controlling capsule symmetry in near vacuum hohlraums at the National Ignition Facility. Physics of Plasmas, 29(7). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0095577

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