Development of low-coherence high-power laser drivers for inertial confinement fusion

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Abstract

The use of low-coherence light is expected to be one of the effective ways to suppress or even eliminate the laser-plasma instabilities that arise in attempts to achieve inertial confinement fusion. In this paper, a review of low-coherence high-power laser drivers and related key techniques is first presented. Work at typical low-coherence laser facilities, including Gekko XII, PHEBUS, Pharos III, and Kanal-2 is described. The many key techniques that are used in the research and development of low-coherence laser drivers are described and analyzed, including low-coherence source generation, amplification, harmonic conversion, and beam smoothing of low-coherence light. Then, recent progress achieved by our group in research on a broadband low-coherence laser driver is presented. During the development of our low-coherence high-power laser facility, we have proposed and implemented many key techniques for working with low-coherence light, including source generation, efficient amplification and propagation, harmonic conversion, beam smoothing, and precise beam control. Based on a series of technological breakthroughs, a kilojoule low-coherence laser driver named Kunwu with a coherence time of only 300 fs has been built, and the first round of physical experiments has been completed. This high-power laser facility provides not only a demonstration and verification platform for key techniques and system integration of a low-coherence laser driver, but also a new type of experimental platform for research into, for example, high-energy-density physics and, in particular, laser-plasma interactions.

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Gao, Y., Cui, Y., Ji, L., Rao, D., Zhao, X., Li, F., … Fu, S. (2020, November 1). Development of low-coherence high-power laser drivers for inertial confinement fusion. Matter and Radiation at Extremes. American Institute of Physics Inc. https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0009319

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