Experimental demonstration of the reduced expansion of a laser-heated surface using a low density foam layer, pertaining to advanced hohlraum designs with less wall-motion

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Abstract

The ablative expansion of laser-heated materials is important for determining how hohlraum cavities can be utilized for inertial confinement fusion. The utility of a low-density foam layer to reduce the density of the expanding heated hohlraum wall is demonstrated in a series of experiments on the National Ignition Facility. X-ray radiography measurements of the expanding foam-lined Au wall in low aspect-ratio cylindrical geometry are used to compare the impact of Au-doped CH and Ta2O5 foams between 10 and 40 mg/cc on the wall expansion. HYDRA Simulations are used to estimate the x-ray transmission at the 1/4 nc surface, which is important in understanding the absorption of laser light by the plasma. These demonstrate for the first time that a foam layer reduces the expansion of a hohlraum-like target and illustrate that the interplay between the expanding foam plasma and the shock reflected by the hohlraum wall is critical in optimizing foam-liner parameters to achieve the maximum time for a symmetric drive on a capsule.

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Moore, A. S., Meezan, N. B., Thomas, C. A., Bhandarkar, S. D., Divol, L., Izumi, N., … Moody, J. D. (2020). Experimental demonstration of the reduced expansion of a laser-heated surface using a low density foam layer, pertaining to advanced hohlraum designs with less wall-motion. Physics of Plasmas, 27(8). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0009857

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