Publication | Open Access
National Ignition Facility target design and fabrication
58
Citations
37
References
2008
Year
Materials ScienceDeuterium-tritium LayeringEngineeringNuclear PhysicsCapsule FabricationTarget FabricationApplied PhysicsInertial Confinement FusionNuclear MaterialsSolid Deuterium-tritiumFusion Reactor MaterialFuel InjectionAccelerator Technology
Abstract The current capsule target design for the first ignition experiments at the NIF Facility beginning in 2009 will be a copper-doped beryllium capsule, roughly 2 mm in diameter with 160-µm walls. The capsule will have a 75-µm layer of solid deuterium-tritium on the inside surface, and the capsule will be powered by X-rays generated from a gold/uranium cocktail hohlraum. The design specifications are extremely rigorous, particularly with respect to interfaces, which must be very smooth to inhibit Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth. This paper outlines the current design, and focuses on the challenges and advances in capsule fabrication and characterization; hohlraum fabrication, and deuterium-tritium layering and characterization.
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