4.4 Article

Modeling ablator grain structure impacts in ICF implosions

期刊

PHYSICS OF PLASMAS
卷 29, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0107534

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资金

  1. U.S. Department of Energy by the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
  2. LLNL-LDRD Program
  3. agency of the U.S. government
  4. [DE-AC52-07NA27344]

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High-density carbon is a commonly used material in inertial confinement fusion (ICF), and its grain structure can introduce small-scale density inhomogeneity. This study presents a grain model to investigate the impact of de-resolving grains on ICF simulations and demonstrates a simple approach to conserving the deposition of kinetic energy perturbations. The simulations also show the complex interaction between grain-induced mixing and instability, highlighting the role of grain-induced perturbations in enhancing mix penetration in the early stage of shell acceleration.
High-density carbon is a leading ablator material for inertial confinement fusion (ICF). This and some other ablator materials have grain structure which is believed to introduce very small-scale (--nm) density inhomogeneity. In principle, such inhomogeneity can affect key ICF metrics like fuel compression and yield, by, for example, acting as a seed for instabilities and inducing mix between ablator and fuel. However, assessments of such effects are uncertain due to the difficulty of modeling this small-scale structure in ICF simulations, typically requiring reduced-resolution modeling that scales these features. We present a grain model and show both the impact of de-resolving grains and the complex mixing dynamics such structures can induce. We find that different methods for de-resolving grains can yield both different total deposition of kinetic energy perturbations and different fuel-ablator mixing. We then show a simple-to-implement approach for approximately conserving the deposition of perturbed kinetic energy and demonstrate that, for the present grain model and test cases, this approach yields a reasonably matched time history of mix width between less and more resolved grain models. The simulations here also demonstrate the complex interaction history between grain-induced mixing and instability around the fuel-ablator interface, showing, for example, that the grain-induced perturbations typically trigger instability of conduction-driven density gradients in the DT fuel, enhancing mix penetration early in the acceleration of the shell. Simulating both microscale and nanoscale grains, we find initial evidence for larger mixing in the microscale case of the present model, despite smaller deposited kinetic energy perturbation. Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing.

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