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- Title
Observation of persistent species temperature separation in inertial confinement fusion mixtures.
- Authors
Haines, Brian M.; Shah, R. C.; Smidt, J. M.; Albright, B. J.; Cardenas, T.; Douglas, M. R.; Forrest, C.; Glebov, V. Yu; Gunderson, M. A.; Hamilton, C. E.; Henderson, K. C.; Kim, Y.; Lee, M. N.; Murphy, T. J.; Oertel, J. A.; Olson, R. E.; Patterson, B. M.; Randolph, R. B.; Schmidt, D. W.
- Abstract
The injection and mixing of contaminant mass into the fuel in inertial confinement fusion (ICF) implosions is a primary factor preventing ignition. ICF experiments have recently achieved an alpha-heating regime, in which fusion self-heating is the dominant source of yield, by reducing the susceptibility of implosions to instabilities that inject this mass. We report the results of unique separated reactants implosion experiments studying pre-mixed contaminant as well as detailed high-resolution three-dimensional simulations that are in good agreement with experiments. At conditions relevant to mixing regions in high-yield implosions, we observe persistent chunks of contaminant that do not achieve thermal equilibrium with the fuel throughout the burn phase. The assumption of thermal equilibrium is made in nearly all computational ICF modeling and methods used to infer levels of contaminant from experiments. We estimate that these methods may underestimate the amount of contaminant by a factor of two or more. The influence of contaminants is one of the factors hindering self-sustained thermonuclear burn in inertial confinement fusion. Here, the authors present evidence, through simulations and experiments, that contaminants do not fully reach thermal equilibrium, and thus their amount is usually underestimated.
- Subjects
INERTIAL confinement fusion; THERMAL equilibrium; INERTIAL mass
- Publication
Nature Communications, 2020, Vol 11, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2041-1723
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s41467-020-14412-y