Publication | Open Access
Design of magnetized liner inertial fusion experiments using the Z facility
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Citations
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References
2014
Year
EngineeringNuclear PhysicsMechanical EngineeringPlasmas 17Fusion PowerPlasma PhysicsFusion MaterialsMagnetic Confinement FusionMagnetismPlasma SimulationControlled Nuclear FusionMagnetohydrodynamicsPlasma ConfinementHigh Energy Density PhysicsPhysicsZ FacilityInertial Fusion TargetsNuclear AstrophysicsInertial Fusion EnergyAerospace EngineeringNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsInertial Confinement FusionFusion System DesignDd Fuel
The magnetized liner inertial fusion concept has been presented as a path toward obtaining substantial thermonuclear fusion yields using the Z accelerator [S. A. Slutz et al., Phys. Plasmas 17, 056303 (2010)]. We present the first integrated magnetohydrodynamic simulations of the inertial fusion targets, which self-consistently include laser preheating of the fuel, the presence of electrodes, and end loss effects. These numerical simulations provided the design for the first thermonuclear fusion neutron-producing experiments on Z using capabilities that presently exist: peak currents of Imax = 18–20 MA, pre-seeded axial magnetic fields of Bz0=10 T, laser preheat energies of about Elas = 2 kJ delivered in 2 ns, DD fuel, and an aspect ratio 6 solid Be liner imploded to 70 km/s. Specific design details and observables for both near-term and future experiments are discussed, including sensitivity to laser timing and absorbed preheat energy. The initial experiments measured stagnation radii rstag<75 μm, temperatures around 3 keV, and isotropic neutron yields up to YnDD=2×1012, with inferred alpha-particle magnetization parameters around rstag/rLα=1.7 [M. R. Gomez et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. (submitted)].
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