4.4 Article

Design considerations for indirectly driven double shell capsules

Journal

PHYSICS OF PLASMAS
Volume 25, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/1.5042478

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy by Los Alamos National Laboratory [DE-AC52-06NA25396]
  2. LANL ICF Program Manager

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Double shell capsules are predicted to ignite and burn at relatively low temperature (similar to 3 keV) via volume ignition and are a potential low-convergence path to substantial alpha-heating and possibly ignition at the National Ignition Facility. Double shells consist of a dense, high-Z pusher, which first shock heats and then performs work due to changes in pressure and volume (PdV work) on deuterium-tritium gas, bringing the entire fuel volume to high pressure thermonuclear conditions near implosion stagnation. The high-Z pusher is accelerated via a shock and subsequent compression of an intervening foam cushion by an ablatively driven low-Z outer shell. A broad capsule design parameter space exists due to the inherent flexibility of potential materials for the outer and inner shells and foam cushion. This is narrowed down by design physics choices and the ability to fabricate and assemble the separate pieces forming a double shell capsule. We describe the key physics for good double shell performance, the trade-offs in various design choices, and the challenges for capsule fabrication. Both 1D and 2D calculations from radiation-hydrodynamic simulations are presented. Published by AIP Publishing.

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