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Mining magnetized liner inertial fusion data: trends in stagnation morphology

Bays, Nathan R.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Shipley, Gabriel; Porwitzky, A.; Awe, Thomas J.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Harding, Eric; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Knapp, Patrick; Mannion, Owen; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Schaeuble, Marc-Andre; Slutz, Stephen A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Woolstrum, Jeffrey M.; Ampleford, David; Shulenburger, Luke N.

FLEXO: A Portably Performant Code for Pulsed Power Target Physics

Stagg, Alan K.; Adams, Marissa B.P.; Bond, Stephen D.; Bova, Steven W.; Cearley, Griffin S.; Cochrane, Kyle; Crockatt, Michael M.; Gardiner, Thomas A.; Granzow, Brian N.; Hamlin, Nathaniel D.; Martin, Matthew R.; Shulenburger, Luke N.; Voth, Thomas E.; Weis, Matthew R.; Woolstrum, Jeffrey M.; Yusuf, Nedim A.

FLEXO (Flux-Limited Extended-MHD Ohm's Law) is a production-line multiphysics code developed at Sandia to enable more predictive modeling of target physics on pulsed-power devices. FLEXO uses an extended magnetohydrodynamics (XMHD) model which includes a generalized Ohm's law (GOL), an electron inertia term, and Hall physics. This report describes the code's numerical methods, its computational performance, and test problems of interest.

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Mining magnetized liner inertial fusion data: trends in stagnation morphology

Bays, Nathan R.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Shipley, Gabriel; Porwitzky, A.; Awe, Thomas J.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Harding, Eric; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Knapp, Patrick; Mannion, Owen; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Schaeuble, Marc-Andre; Slutz, Stephen A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Woolstrum, Jeffrey M.; Ampleford, David; Shulenburger, Luke N.

Mining experimental magnetized liner inertial fusion data: Trends in stagnation morphology

Physics of Plasmas

Bays, Nathan R.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Shipley, Gabriel A.; Porwitzky, A.; Awe, Thomas J.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Harding, Eric; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Knapp, Patrick F.; Mannion, Owen; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Schaeuble, Marc-Andre; Slutz, Stephen A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Woolstrum, Jeffrey M.; Ampleford, David; Shulenburger, Luke N.

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Three-dimensional reconstruction of x-ray emission volumes in magnetized liner inertial fusion from sparse projection data using a learned basis

Journal of Applied Physics

Fein, Jeffrey R.; Harding, Eric; Bays, Nathan R.; Weis, Matthew R.; Schaeuble, Marc-Andre

The ability to visualize x-ray and neutron emission from fusion plasmas in 3D is critical to understand the origin of the complex shapes of the plasmas in experiments. Unfortunately, this remains challenging in experiments that study a fusion concept known as Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion (MagLIF) due to a small number of available diagnostic views. Here, we present a basis function-expansion approach to reconstruct MagLIF stagnation plasmas from a sparse set of x-ray emission images. A set of natural basis functions is “learned” from training volumes containing quasi-helical structures whose projections are qualitatively similar to those observed in experimental images. Tests on several known volumes demonstrate that the learned basis outperforms both a cylindrical harmonic basis and a simple voxel basis with additional regularization, according to several metrics. Two-view reconstructions with the learned basis can estimate emission volumes to within 11% and those with three views recover morphology to a high degree of accuracy. The technique is applied to experimental data, producing the first 3D reconstruction of a MagLIF stagnation column from multiple views, providing additional indications of liner instabilities imprinting onto the emitting plasma.

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Three-dimensional simulations of magneto-inertial Magnetic-Direct-Drive targets

Weis, Matthew R.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Shulenburger, Luke N.; Ampleford, David

For the cylindrically symmetric targets that are normally fielded on the Z machine, two dimensional axisymmetric MHD simulations provide the backbone of our target design capability. These simulations capture the essential operation of the target and allow for a wide range of physics to be addressed at a substantially lower computational cost than 3D simulations. This approach, however, makes some approximations that may impact its ability to accurately provide insight into target operation. As an example, in 2D simulations, targets are able to stagnate directly to the axis in a way that is not entirely physical, leading to uncertainty in the impact of the dynamical instabilities that are an important source of degradation for ICF concepts. In this report, we have performed a series of 3D calculations in order to assess the importance of this higher fidelity treatment on MagLIF target performance.

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Data-driven assessment of magnetic charged particle confinement parameter scaling in magnetized liner inertial fusion experiments on Z

Physics of Plasmas

Bays, Nathan R.; Mannion, Owen; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Knapp, P.F.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Weis, Matthew R.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Ampleford, David; Beckwith, Kristian

In magneto-inertial fusion, the ratio of the characteristic fuel length perpendicular to the applied magnetic field R to the α-particle Larmor radius Q α is a critical parameter setting the scale of electron thermal-conduction loss and charged burn-product confinement. Using a previously developed deep-learning-based Bayesian inference tool, we obtain the magnetic-field fuel-radius product B R ∝ R / Q α from an ensemble of 16 magnetized liner inertial fusion (MagLIF) experiments. Observations of the trends in BR are consistent with relative trade-offs between compression and flux loss as well as the impact of mix from 1D resistive radiation magneto-hydrodynamics simulations in all but two experiments, for which 3D effects are hypothesized to play a significant role. Finally, we explain the relationship between BR and the generalized Lawson parameter χ. Our results indicate the ability to improve performance in MagLIF through careful tuning of experimental inputs, while also highlighting key risks from mix and 3D effects that must be mitigated in scaling MagLIF to higher currents with a next-generation driver.

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Demonstration of improved laser preheat with a cryogenically cooled magnetized liner inertial fusion platform

Review of Scientific Instruments

Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Geissel, Matthias; Crabtree, Jerry A.; Weis, Matthew R.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Bays, Nathan R.; Ampleford, David; Awe, Thomas J.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Knapp, P.F.; Kimmel, Mark; Mangan, Michael A.; Peterson, K.J.; Porter, John L.; Rochau, Gregory A.; Ruiz, Daniel E.; Hanson, Joseph C.; Harding, Eric; Perea, L.; Robertson, G.K.; Shores, Jonathon; Slutz, Stephen A.; Smith, G.E.; Speas, Christopher S.; Yager-Elorriaga, David A.; York, A.

We report on progress implementing and testing cryogenically cooled platforms for Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion (MagLIF) experiments. Two cryogenically cooled experimental platforms were developed: an integrated platform fielded on the Z pulsed power generator that combines magnetization, laser preheat, and pulsed-power-driven fuel compression and a laser-only platform in a separate chamber that enables measurements of the laser preheat energy using shadowgraphy measurements. The laser-only experiments suggest that ∼89% ± 10% of the incident energy is coupled to the fuel in cooled targets across the energy range tested, significantly higher than previous warm experiments that achieved at most 67% coupling and in line with simulation predictions. The laser preheat configuration was applied to a cryogenically cooled integrated experiment that used a novel cryostat configuration that cooled the MagLIF liner from both ends. The integrated experiment, z3576, coupled 2.32 ± 0.25 kJ preheat energy to the fuel, the highest to-date, demonstrated excellent temperature control and nominal current delivery, and produced one of the highest pressure stagnations as determined by a Bayesian analysis of the data.

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Experimental demonstration of >20 kJ laser energy coupling in 1-cm hydrocarbon-filled gas pipe targets via inverse Bremsstrahlung absorption with applications to MagLIF

Physics of Plasmas

Pollock, B.B.; Goyon, C.; Sefkow, A.B.; Glinsky, M.E.; Peterson, K.J.; Weis, Matthew R.; Carroll, E.G.; Fry, J.; Piston, K.; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Beckwith, Kristian; Ampleford, David; Tubman, E.R.; Strozzi, D.J.; Ross, J.S.; Moody, J.D.

Laser propagation experiments using four beams of the National Ignition Facility to deliver up to 35 kJ of laser energy at 351 nm laser wavelength to heat magnetized liner inertial fusion-scale (1 cm-long), hydrocarbon-filled gas pipe targets to ∼keV electron temperatures have demonstrated energy coupling >20 kJ with essentially no backscatter in 15% critical electron density gas fills with 0-19 T applied axial magnetic fields. The energy coupling is also investigated for an electron density of 11.5% critical and for applied field strengths up to 24 T at both densities. This spans a range of Hall parameters 0 < ω c e τ e i ≲2, where a Hall parameter of 0.5 is expected to reduce electron thermal conduction across the field lines by a factor of 4-5 for the conditions of these experiments. At sufficiently high applied field strength (and therefore Hall parameter), the measured laser propagation speed through the targets increases in the measurements, consistent with reduced perpendicular electron thermal transport; this reduces the coupled energy to the target once the laser burns through the gas pipe. The results compare well with a 1D analytic propagation model for inverse Bremsstrahlung absorption.

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Helium as a Surrogate for Deuterium in LPI Studies

Laser and Particle Beams

Geissel, Matthias; Harvey-Thompson, Adam J.; Weis, Matthew R.; Fein, Jeffrey R.; Bliss, David E.; Kimmel, Mark; Shores, Jonathon; Smith, Ian C.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Porter, John L.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Ampleford, David; Hansen, A.

Helium or neopentane can be used as surrogate gas fill for deuterium (D2) or deuterium-tritium (DT) in laser-plasma interaction studies. Surrogates are convenient to avoid flammability hazards or the integration of cryogenics in an experiment. To test the degree of equivalency between deuterium and helium, experiments were conducted in the Pecos target chamber at Sandia National Laboratories. Observables such as laser propagation and signatures of laser-plasma instabilities (LPI) were recorded for multiple laser and target configurations. It was found that some observables can differ significantly despite the apparent similarity of the gases with respect to molecular charge and weight. While a qualitative behaviour of the interaction may very well be studied by finding a suitable compromise of laser absorption, electron density, and LPI cross sections, a quantitative investigation of expected values for deuterium fills at high laser intensities is not likely to succeed with surrogate gases.

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Results 1–25 of 129
Results 1–25 of 129
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