Abstract
In inertial confinement fusion, the threshold for ignition is a highly dynamic quantity as the sources and sinks of power in the hot spot can vary rapidly. In this article, we consider the ignition condition as a race between heating and disassembly rates and make use of a prior solution to the fusion hot-spot thermodynamics to develop a Lawson-like ignition criteria for pressure × confinement time (p-τ) vs temperature. Low-Z capsule designs reach the temperature for this threshold using as much of the shell as feasible as ablator but then are limited in τ by low stagnated mass. An alternate approach, the pushered single shell (PSS) design [D. D.-M. Ho, S. MacLaren, and Y. Wang, "High-yield implosions via radiation trapping and high rho-R,"paper presented at the 60th Annual Meeting of the APS Division of Plasma Physics, 2018], introduces a dense inner layer of Mo-Be alloy that is smoothly graded outward to pure Be, increasing the confinement time at stagnation and lowering the temperature requirement at the ignition threshold. Here, we describe a PSS ignition design for the National Ignition Facility and use the theory as well as simulations to compare it with the low-Z capsule approach. Additionally, we show how an adjustment to the design is used to anticipate the effects of mixing at the fuel-ablator interface.
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CITATION STYLE
MacLaren, S. A., Ho, D. D. M., Hurricane, O. A., Dewald, E. L., Martinez, D. A., Tipton, R. E., … Sequoia, K. (2021). A pushered capsule implosion as an alternate approach to the ignition regime for inertial confinement fusion. Physics of Plasmas, 28(12). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0064971
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