Magnetizing the fuel in inertial confinement fusion relaxes ignition requirements by reducing thermal conductivity and changing the physics of burn product confinement. Diagnosing the level of fuel magnetization during burn is critical to understanding target performance in magneto-inertial fusion (MIF) implosions. In pure deuterium fusion plasma, 1.01 MeV tritons are emitted during DD fusion and can undergo secondary DT reactions before exiting the fuel. Increasing the fuel magnetization elongates the path lengths through the fuel of some of the tritons, enhancing their probability of reaction. Based on this feature, a method to diagnose fuel magnetization using the ratio of overall DT to DD neutron yields is developed. Analysis of anisotropies in the secondary neutron energy spectra further constrain the measurement. Secondary reactions are also shown to provide an upper bound for volumetric fuel-pusher mix in MIF. The analysis is applied to recent MIF experiments [M. R. Gomez et al., to appear in PRL] on the Z Pulsed Power Facility, indicating that significant magnetic confinement of charged burn products was achieved and suggesting a relatively low-mix environment. Both of these are essential features of future ignition-scale MIF designs. PACS numbers:Introduction.-Magneto-inertial fusion (MIF) offers some key advantages over traditional inertial confinement fusion (ICF). In MIF, fuel magnetization relaxes the extreme pressure requirements characteristic of traditional ICF and enhances thermal insulation of the hot fuel from the colder pusher [1-10]. We consider paradigmatically the radial compression of a long, thin cylinder of fuel magnetized with a uniform, axial field prior to compression [11][12][13][14][15][16][17]. At stagnation, the compressed magnetic flux redirects charged burn products axially, increasing the effective fuel areal density from ρR to ρZ, where ρ is the fuel mass density, R is the fuel radius, Z is the fuel length, and A ≡ Z/R ≫ 1 is the aspect ratio.Sandia National Laboratories has fielded the first integrated experiments investigating Magnetized Liner I nertial F usion (MagLIF) [14][15][16][17], which involves direct compression of magnetized, preheated deuterium fuel by a solid metal (beryllium) liner, imploded on the 26 MA, 100 ns Z Pulsed Power Facility [18]. The imploding cylindrical liner compresses a pre-seeded axial magnetic field, B 0 (≈ 10 T in the first experiments), to high amplitude at stagnation, B, where perfect flux conservation would imply B = B 0 (R 0 /R) 2 , and R 0 = 2.325 mm is the initial fuel radius. However, detailed simulations suggest that multiple effects (e.g., resistive losses, Nerst effect) can lead to leakage of magnetic flux out of the hot fuel [14,17]. Thus, diagnosing the efficacy of flux compression in experiments is critical for understanding target performance and the viability of the concept.
Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion (MagLIF) [1] is a concept that involves using a pulsed electrical current to implode an initially-solid, cylindrical metal tube (liner) filled with preheated and magnetized fusion fuel. One-and two-dimensional simulations predict that if sufficient liner integrity can be maintained throughout the implosion, then significant fusion yield (>100 kJ) is possible on the 25-MA, 100-ns Z accelerator. The greatest threat to the liner integrity is the Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor (MRT) instability, which first develops on the outer liner surface, and then works its way inward toward the inner surface throughout the implosion. Two-dimensional simulations predict that a thick liner, with R outer /∆R=6, should be robust enough to keep the MRT instability from overly disrupting the fusion burn at stagnation. This talk will present the first experiments designed to study a thick, MagLIF-relevant liner implosion through to stagnation on Z [2]. The use of beryllium for the liner material enabled us to obtain penetrating monochromatic (6151±0.5 eV) radiographs that reveal information about the entire volume of the imploding liner. This talk will also discuss experiments that investigated Z's pulseshaping capabilities to either shock-or shocklessly-compress the imploding liners [3], as well as our most recent experiments that used 2-micron-thick aluminum sleeves to provide high-contrast tracers for the positions and states of the inner surfaces of the imploding beryllium liners. The radiography data to be presented provide stringent constraints on the simulation tools used by the broader high energy density physics and inertial confinement fusion communities, where quantitative areal density measurements, particularly of convergent fusion targets, are relatively scarce. We will also present power-flow tests of the MagLIF load hardware as well as new micro-B-dot measurements of the azimuthal drive magnetic field that penetrates the initially vacuum filled interior of the liner during the implosion.
We present experimental results from the first systematic study of performance scaling with drive parameters for a magnetoinertial fusion concept. In magnetized liner inertial fusion experiments, the burnaveraged ion temperature doubles to 3.1 keV and the primary deuterium-deuterium neutron yield increases by more than an order of magnitude to 1.1 × 10 13 (2 kJ deuterium-tritium equivalent) through a simultaneous increase in the applied magnetic field (from 10.4 to 15.9 T), laser preheat energy (from 0.46 to 1.2 kJ), and current coupling (from 16 to 20 MA). Individual parametric scans of the initial magnetic field and laser preheat energy show the expected trends, demonstrating the importance of magnetic insulation and the impact of the Nernst effect for this concept. A drive-current scan shows that present experiments operate close to the point where implosion stability is a limiting factor in performance, demonstrating the need to raise fuel pressure as drive current is increased. Simulations that capture these experimental trends indicate that another order of magnitude increase in yield on the Z facility is possible with additional increases of input parameters.
The implosions of initially solid beryllium liners (tubes) have been imaged with penetrating radiography through to stagnation. These novel radiographic data reveal a high degree of azimuthal correlation in the evolving magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor structure at times just prior to (and during) stagnation, providing stringent constraints on the simulation tools used by the broader high energy density physics and inertial confinement fusion communities. To emphasize this point, comparisons to 2D and 3D radiation magnetohydrodynamics simulations are also presented. Both agreement and substantial disagreement have been found, depending on how the liner's initial outer surface finish was modeled. The various models tested, and the physical implications of these models are discussed. These comparisons exemplify the importance of the experimental data obtained.
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