Target design for shock ignition

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Abstract

The conventional approach of laser driven inertial fusion involves the implosion of cryogenic shells of deuterium-tritium ice. At sufficiently high implosion velocities, the fuel ignites by itself from a central hot spot. In order to reduce the risks of hydrodynamic instabilities inherent to large implosion velocities, it was proposed to compress the fuel at low velocity, and ignite the compressed fuel by means of a convergent shock wave driven by an intense spike at the end of the laser pulse. This scheme, known as shock ignition, reduces the risks of shell break-up during the acceleration phase, but it may be impeded by a low coupling efficiency of the laser pulse with plasma at high intensities. This work provides a relationship between the implosion velocity and the laser intensity required to ignite the target by a shock. The operating domain of shock ignition at different energies is described. © 2010 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Schurtz, G., Ribeyre, X., & Lafon, M. (2010). Target design for shock ignition. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 244). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/244/2/022013

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