Along-term goal of inertial-confinement fusion research is the generation of energy by imploding capsules containing deuterium-tritium fuel. Progress in designing the capsules is aided by accurate imaging of the fusion burn. Penumbral coded-aperture techniques have been used to obtain neutron images that are a direct measurement of the fusion burn region in the capsules.
The motional Stark effect (MSE) diagnostic on DIII-D has been expanded to take advantage of a change in the neutral beam geometry, adding 24 new MSE channels viewing a beam injected counter to the plasma current. When data from these channels are used with those from two older MSE arrays viewing a different beam, the overall radial resolution improves near the magnetic axis at least a factor of 2, and the uncertainty in calculations of vertical magnetic field and radial electric field decreases in the edge at least a factor of 4. The new design uses two optical systems mounted on the same vacuum port with a common shutter and shielding.
Fast beam-ion losses were studied in DIII-D in the presence of a scaled mockup of two Test Blanket Modules (TBM) for ITER. Heating of the protective tiles on the front of the TBM surface was found when neutral beams were injected and the TBM fields were engaged. The fast-ion core confinement was not significantly affected. Different orbit-following codes predict the formation of a hot spot on the TBM surface arising from beam-ions deposited near the edge of the plasma. The codes are in good agreement with each other on the total power deposited at the hot spot predicting an increase in power with decreasing separation between the plasma edge and the TBM surface. A thermal analysis of the heat flow through the tiles shows that the simulated power can account for the measured tile temperature rise. The thermal analysis, however, is very sensitive to the details of the localization of the hot spot which is predicted to be different among the various codes.
Images of the neutron-emitting region of high-yield inertial confinement fusion targets have been obtained with a penumbral coded-aperture imaging system. The major components of the imaging system are the penumbral aperture, neutron detector, alignment hardware, and image reconstruction software. We describe these components and present an example of the neutron imaging results.
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