Taking full advantage of the unique laboratory environment created by the National Ignition Facility (NIF) will require the availability of foam-lined indirect-drive inertial confinement fusion targets. Here, we report on a new approach that enables fabrication of target structures that consist of a thin-walled (<30 µm) ultra-low-density (<30 mg cm−3) hydrocarbon foam film inside a thick-walled, ∼2 mm diameter ablator shell. In contrast to previous work on direct-drive targets that started with the fabrication of foam shells, we use a prefabricated ablator as a mold to cast the foam liner within the shell. This work summarizes crucial components of this new approach, including the aerogel chemistry, filling of the ablator shell with the aerogel precursor solution with nanolitre precision, creating uniform polymer gel coatings inside the ablator capsule, supercritical drying and doping.
It is known previously that bulk metallic glass compositions satisfy cluster formulae [cluster](glue atom)1,3 of 24 valence electrons as deduced from our cluster-resonance model. In the present work, it is further shown that compositions of Al-based binary and ternary quasicrystals are also explained by 24-electron cluster formulae of the types [icosahedron](glue atom)0,1, where the icosahedral cluster is identied from a corresponding crystalline approximant according to dense atomic packing and cluster isolation criteria, and the glue atom site is either vacant for an icosahedral quasicrystal or equal to one for a decagonal quasicrystal. Ternary quasicrystals are formulated with the same formulae as their basic binary ones but the icosahedron shell sites are substituted by third elements. The 24-electron cluster formulae are then the chemical and electronic structural units of quasicrystals, mimicking the molecular formulae of chemical substances.
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