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Electrothermal instability growth in magnetically driven pulsed power liners

Physics of Plasmas

Sinars, Daniel; Yu, Edmund; Herrmann, Mark H.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Smith, Ian C.; Atherton, B.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Nakhleh, Charles

This paper explores the role of electro-thermal instabilities on the dynamics of magnetically accelerated implosion systems. Electro-thermal instabilities result from non-uniform heating due to temperature dependence in the conductivity of a material. Comparatively little is known about these types of instabilities compared to the well known Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor (MRT) instability. We present simulations that show electrothermal instabilities form immediately after the surface material of a conductor melts and can act as a significant seed to subsequent MRT instability growth. We also present the results of several experiments performed on Sandia National Laboratories Z accelerator to investigate signatures of electrothermal instability growth on well characterized initially solid aluminum and copper rods driven with a 20 MA, 100 ns risetime current pulse. These experiments show excellent agreement with electrothermal instability simulations and exhibit larger instability growth than can be explained by MRT theory alone. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.

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Determination of pressure and density of shocklessly compressed beryllium from x-ray radiography of a magnetically driven cylindrical liner implosion

AIP Conference Proceedings

Lemke, R.W.; Martin, M.R.; Mcbride, Ryan; Davis, Jean-Paul; Knudson, Marcus D.; Sinars, Daniel; Smith, Ian C.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Killebrew, K.; Flicker, Dawn; Herrmann, Mark H.

We describe a technique for measuring the pressure and density of a metallic solid, shocklessly compressed to multi-megabar pressure, through x-ray radiography of a magnetically driven, cylindrical liner implosion. Shockless compression of the liner produces material states that correspond approximately to the principal compression isentrope (quasi-isentrope). This technique is used to determine the principal quasi-isentrope of solid beryllium to a peak pressure of 2.4 Mbar from x-ray images of a high current (20 MA), fast (∼100 ns) liner implosion. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.

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Solid liner implosions on Z for producing multi-megabar, shockless compressions

Physics of Plasmas

Martin, M.R.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Mcbride, Ryan; Davis, Jean-Paul; Dolan, Daniel H.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Cochrane, K.R.; Sinars, Daniel; Smith, Ian C.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Killebrew, K.; Flicker, Dawn; Herrmann, Mark H.

Current pulse shaping techniques, originally developed for planar dynamic material experiments on the Z-machine [M. K. Matzen, Phys. Plasmas 12, 055503 (2005)], are adapted to the design of controlled cylindrical liner implosions. By driving these targets with a current pulse shape that prevents shock formation inside the liner, shock heating is avoided along with the corresponding decrease in electrical conductivity ahead of the magnetic diffusion wave penetrating the liner. This results in an imploding liner with a significant amount of its mass in the solid phase and at multi-megabar pressures. Pressures in the solid region of a shaped pulse driven beryllium liner fielded on the Z-machine are inferred to 5.5 Mbar, while simulations suggest implosion velocities greater than 50 kms-1. These solid liner experiments are diagnosed with multi-frame monochromatic x-ray backlighting which is used to infer the material density and pressure. This work has led to a new platform on the Z-machine that can be used to perform off-Hugoniot measurements at higher pressures than are accessible through magnetically driven planar geometries. © 2012 American Institute of Physics.

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Pulsed-power driven inertial confinement fusion development at Sandia National Laboratories

Proposed for publication in 5th Special Issue of the IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science Z-Pinch Plasmas.

Cuneo, Michael E.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; Lamppa, Derek C.; Kaye, Ronald J.; Nakhleh, Charles; Bailey, James E.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Mcbride, Ryan; Herrmann, Mark H.; Lopez, Andrew J.; Peterson, K.J.; Ampleford, David J.; Jones, Michael; Savage, Mark E.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Martin, Matthew R.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Christenson, Peggy J.; Sweeney, Mary A.; Jones, Brent M.; Yu, Edmund; Mcpherson, Leroy A.; Harding, Eric H.; Knapp, P.F.; Gomez, Matthew R.; Awe, Thomas J.; Stygar, William A.; Leeper, Ramon J.; Ruiz, Carlos L.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Mckenney, John; Owen, Albert C.; Mckee, G.R.; Matzen, M.K.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; Atherton, B.; Vesey, Roger A.; Smith, Ian C.; Geissel, Matthias; Rambo, Patrick K.; Sinars, Daniel; Sefkow, Adam B.; Rovang, Dean C.; Rochau, G.A.

Abstract not provided.

Penetrating radiography of imploding and stagnating beryllium liners on the Z accelerator

Physical Review Letters

Mcbride, Ryan; Peterson, K.J.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Nakhleh, Charles; Laspe, Amy R.; Lopez, Mike R.; Smith, Ian C.; Atherton, B.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Rogers, Thomas; Jennings, Christopher A.; Sinars, Daniel; Cuneo, Michael E.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Martin, Matthew R.; Vesey, Roger A.

Abstract not provided.

Plasma Power Station with Quasi Spherical Direct Drive Capsule for Fusion Yield and Inverse Diode for Driver-Target Coupling

Fusion Science and Technology

Cuneo, Michael E.; Matzen, M.K.; Sinars, Daniel; Slutz, Stephen A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Vesey, Roger A.; Seidel, David B.; Schneider, Larry X.; Mikkelson, Kenneth A.; Harper-Slaboszewicz, V.; Sefkow, Adam B.

The Meier-Moir economic model for Pulsed Power Driven Inertial Fusion Energy shows at least two approaches for fusion energy at 7 to 8 cents/kw-hr: One with large yield at 0.1 Hz and presented by M. E. Cuneo at ICENES 2011 and one with smaller yield at 3 Hz presented in this paper. Both use very efficient and low cost Linear Transformer Drivers (LTDs) for the pulsed power. Here, we report the system configuration and end-to-end simulation for the latter option, which is called the Plasma Power Station (PPS), and report the first results on the two, least mature, enabling technologies: a magnetically driven Quasi Spherical Direct Drive (QSDD) capsule for the fusion yield and an Inverse Diode for coupling the driver to the target. In addition, we describe the issues and propose to address the issues with a prototype of the PPS on the Saturn accelerator and with experiments on a short pulse modification of the Z accelerator test the validity of simulations showing megajoule thermonuclear yield with DT on a modified Z.

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Plasma power station with quasi spherical direct drive capsule for fusion yield and inverse diode for driver-target coupling

Fusion Science and Technology

VanDevender, J.P.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Slutz, S.A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Vesey, Roger A.; Sinars, Daniel; Seidel, David B.; Schneider, Larry X.; Mikkelson, Kenneth A.; Harper-Slaboszewicz, V.; Peyton, B.P.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Matzen, M.K.

The Meier-Moir economic model for Pulsed Power Driven Inertial Fusion Energy shows at least two approaches for fusion energy at 7 to 8 cents/kw-hr: One with large yield at 0.1 Hz and presented by M. E. Cuneo at ICENES 2011 and one with smaller yield at 3 Hz presented in this paper. Both use very efficient and low cost Linear Transformer Drivers (LTDs) for the pulsed power. We report the system configuration and end-toend simulation for the latter option, which is called the Plasma Power Station (PPS), and report the first results on the two, least mature, enabling technologies: a magnetically driven Quasi Spherical Direct Drive (QSDD) capsule for the fusion yield and an Inverse Diode for coupling the driver to the target. In addition, we describe the issues and propose to address the issues with a prototype of the PPS on the Saturn accelerator and with experiments on a short pulse modification of the Z accelerator test the validity of simulations showing megajoule thermonuclear yield with DT on a modified Z.

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Observation of instability growth in a copper Z-pinch target using two-color monochromatic X-ray backlighting

IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science

Sinars, Daniel; Wenger, D.F.; Peterson, K.J.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Yu, Edmund; Cuneo, Michael E.; Smith, Ian C.; Atherton, B.; Porter, John L.

Existing monochromatic X-ray backlighting diagnostics at 1.865 and 6.151 keV have been combined to create a two-color monochromatic X-ray backlighting diagnostic. The use of different photon energies can allow a much broader range of areal densities to be observed in a single experiment. Here, we apply the two-color backlighter to the study of instability growth on the outside edge of an initially solid copper rod target driven by a 100-ns rise-time current pulse with a peak value of 20 MA. The different opacity of Cu at these two photon energies allows a dynamic range of ∼1600x to be surveyed instead of ∼60x (assuming a useful transmission range of 5%-95%). © 2006 IEEE.

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Beryllium liner z-pinches for Magneto-Rayleigh--Taylor studies on Z

Mcbride, Ryan; Slutz, Stephen A.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Sinars, Daniel; Lemke, Raymond W.; Martin, Matthew R.; Vesey, Roger A.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Herrmann, Mark H.

Magnetic Liner Inertial Fusion (MagLIF) [S. A. Slutz, et al., Phys. Plasmas 17 056303 (2010)] is a promising new concept for achieving >100 kJ of fusion yield on Z. The greatest threat to this concept is the Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor (MRT) instability. Thus an experimental campaign has been initiated to study MRT growth in fast-imploding (<100 ns) cylindrical liners. The first sets of experiments studied aluminum liner implosions with prescribed sinusoidal perturbations (see talk by D. Sinars). By contrast, this poster presents results from the latest sets of experiments that used unperturbed beryllium (Be) liners. The purpose for using Be is that we are able to radiograph 'through' the liner using the 6-keV photons produced by the Z-Beamlet backlighting system. This has enabled us to obtain time-resolved measurements of the imploding liner's density as a function of both axial and radial location throughout the field of view. This data is allowing us to evaluate the integrity of the inside (fuel-confining) surface of the imploding liner as it approaches stagnation.

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Measurements of magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth during the implosion of initially solid metal liners

Physics of Plasmas

Sinars, Daniel; Edens, Aaron; Lopez, Mike R.; Smith, Ian C.; Shores, Jonathon; Slutz, Stephen A.; Bennett, Guy R.; Atherton, B.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Mcbride, Ryan; Cuneo, Michael E.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Peterson, K.J.; Vesey, Roger A.; Nakhleh, Charles

Abstract not provided.

The evolution of instabilities during magnetically driven liner implosions

Slutz, Stephen A.; Sinars, Daniel; Mcbride, Ryan; Jennings, Christopher A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Cuneo, Michael E.

Numerical simulations [S.A. Slutz et al Phys. Plasmas 17, 056303 (2010)] indicate that fuel magnetization and preheat could enable cylindrical liner implosions to become an efficient means to generate fusion conditions. A series of simulations has been performed to study the stability of magnetically driven liner implosions. These simulations exhibit the initial growth and saturation of an electro-thermal instability. The Rayleigh-Taylor instability further amplifies the resultant density perturbations developing a spectrum of modes initially peaked at short wavelengths. With time the spectrum of modes evolves towards longer wavelengths developing an inverse cascade. The effects of mode coupling, the radial dependence of the magnetic pressure, and the initial surface roughness will be discussed.

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Scaling of X pinches from 1 MA to 6 MA

Sinars, Daniel; Mcbride, Ryan; Wenger, D.F.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Yu, Edmund; Harding, Eric H.; Hansen, Stephanie B.; Ampleford, David J.; Jennings, Christopher A.

This final report for Project 117863 summarizes progress made toward understanding how X-pinch load designs scale to high currents. The X-pinch load geometry was conceived in 1982 as a method to study the formation and properties of bright x-ray spots in z-pinch plasmas. X-pinch plasmas driven by 0.2 MA currents were found to have source sizes of 1 micron, temperatures >1 keV, lifetimes of 10-100 ps, and densities >0.1 times solid density. These conditions are believed to result from the direct magnetic compression of matter. Physical models that capture the behavior of 0.2 MA X pinches predict more extreme parameters at currents >1 MA. This project developed load designs for up to 6 MA on the SATURN facility and attempted to measure the resulting plasma parameters. Source sizes of 5-8 microns were observed in some cases along with evidence for high temperatures (several keV) and short time durations (<500 ps).

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Measurements of Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth in solid liners on the 20 MA Z facility

Sinars, Daniel; Edens, Aaron; Lopez, Mike R.; Smith, Ian C.; Shores, Jonathon; Bennett, Guy R.; Atherton, B.; Savage, Mark E.; Stygar, William A.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; Slutz, Stephen A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Peterson, K.J.; Mcbride, Ryan; Vesey, Roger A.; Nakhleh, Charles; Tomlinson, Kurt T.

The magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor (MRT) instability is the most important instability for determining whether a cylindrical liner can be compressed to its axis in a relatively intact form, a requirement for achieving the high pressures needed for inertial confinement fusion (ICF) and other high energy-density physics applications. While there are many published RT studies, there are a handful of well-characterized MRT experiments at time scales >1 {micro}s and none for 100 ns z-pinch implosions. Experiments used solid Al liners with outer radii of 3.16 mm and thicknesses of 292 {micro}m, dimensions similar to magnetically-driven ICF target designs [1]. In most tests the MRT instability was seeded with sinusoidal perturbations ({lambda} = 200, 400 {micro}m, peak-to-valley amplitudes of 10, 20 {micro}m, respectively), wavelengths similar to those predicted to dominate near stagnation. Radiographs show the evolution of the MRT instability and the effects of current-induced ablation of mass from the liner surface. Additional Al liner tests used 25-200 {micro}m wavelengths and flat surfaces. Codes being used to design magnetized liner ICF loads [1] match the features seen except at the smallest scales (<50 {micro}m). Recent experiments used Be liners to enable penetrating radiography using the same 6.151 keV diagnostics and provide an in-flight measurement of the liner density profile.

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Pulsed power driven Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor experiments

Slutz, Stephen A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Vesey, Roger A.; Sefkow, Adam B.; Sinars, Daniel; Rovang, Dean C.; Peterson, K.J.; Cuneo, Michael E.

Numerical simulations indicate that significant fusion yields (>100 kJ) may be obtained by pulsed-power-driven implosions of cylindrical metal liners onto magnetized and preheated deuterium-tritium fuel. The primary physics risk to this approach is the Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor (MRT) instability, which operates during both the acceleration and deceleration phase of the liner implosion. We have designed and performed some experiments to study the MRT during the acceleration phase, where the light fluid is purely magnetic. Results from our first series of experiments and plans for future experiments will be presented. According to simulations, an initial axial magnetic field of 10 T is compressed to >100 MG within the liner during the implosion. The magnetic pressure becomes comparable to the plasma pressure during deceleration, which could significantly affect the growth of the MRT instability at the fuel/liner interface. The MRT instability is also important in some astronomical objects such as the Crab Nebula (NGC1962). In particular, the morphological structure of the observed filaments may be determined by the ratio of the magnetic to material pressure and alignment of the magnetic field with the direction of acceleration [Hester, ApJ, 456, 225 1996]. Potential experiments to study this MRT behavior using the Z facility will be presented.

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Investigation of radial wire arrays for inertial confinement fusion and radiation effects science

Ampleford, David J.; Jennings, Christopher A.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Mcbride, Ryan; Sinars, Daniel; Jones, Brent M.; Coverdale, Christine A.; Jones, Michael

Radial wire arrays provide an alternative x-ray source for Z-pinch driven Inertial Confinement Fusion. These arrays, where wires are positioned radially outwards from a central cathode to a concentric anode, have the potential to drive a more compact ICF hohlraum. A number of experiments were performed on the 7MA Saturn Generator. These experiments studied a number of potential risks in scaling radial wire arrays up from the 1MA level, where they have been shown to provide similar x-ray outputs to larger diameter cylindrical arrays, to the higher current levels required for ICF. Data indicates that at 7MA radial arrays can obtain higher power densities than cylindrical wire arrays, so may be of use for x-ray driven ICF on future facilities. Even at the 7MA level, data using Saturn's short pulse mode indicates that a radial array should be able to drive a compact hohlraum to temperatures {approx}92eV, which may be of interest for opacity experiments. These arrays are also shown to have applications to jet production for laboratory astrophysics. MHD simulations require additional physics to match the observed behavior.

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Lower bounds for the kinetic energy and resistance of wire array Z pinches on the Z pulsed-power accelerator

Physics of Plasmas

Waisman, Eduardo M.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Sinars, Daniel; Stygar, William A.

Approximate lower bounds for the kinetic energy and magnetic flux dissipation for tungsten wire arrays on the Z pulsed-power accelerator at Sandia National Laboratories [R. B. Spielman, Phys. Plasmas 5, 2105 (1998)] are obtained. A procedure, extending previous work determining pinch inductance as a function of time [E. M. Waisman, Phys. Plasmas 11, 2009 (2004)], is introduced and applied to electrical and x-ray energy measurements. It employs the pinch energy balance to determine lower bounds for the plasma kinetic energy just before the main pinch reaches the axis and for the magnetic flux dissipation during stagnation. From the lower bound for the dissipated flux, a lower bound for pinch resistance after x-ray peak power is estimated. The results of applying the introduced energy balance procedure to selected tungsten wire array implosions on Z are given. It is believed that this is the first time that a measure of wire array Z-pinch resistance at stagnation is obtained purely from data analysis without recourse to specific assumptions on the plasma motion. © 2008 American Institute of Physics.

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Fill-Tube-Induced Mass Perturbations on X-Ray-Driven, Ignition-Scale, Inertial-Confinement-Fusion Capsule Shells and the Implications for Ignition Experiments

Physical Review Letters

Bennett, Guy R.; Keller, Keith L.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Peterson, K.J.; Sinars, Daniel; Smith, Ian C.; Vesey, Roger A.; Herrmann, Mark H.; Christenson, Peggy J.; Cuneo, Michael E.

We present on the first inertial-confinement-fusion ignition facility, the target capsule will be DT filled through a long, narrow tube inserted into the shell. μg-scale shell perturbations Δm' arising from multiple, 10–50 μm-diameter, hollow SiO2 tubes on x-ray-driven, ignition-scale, 1-mg capsules have been measured on a subignition device. Finally, simulations compare well with observation, whence it is corroborated that Δm' arises from early x-ray shadowing by the tube rather than tube mass coupling to the shell, and inferred that 10–20 μm tubes will negligibly affect fusion yield on a full-ignition facility.

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Z-Beamlet: a multi-KJ TW-class laser for backlit x-radiography applications on the Z-Accelerator

Atherton, B.; Gonzales, Rita A.; Gurrieri, Thomas; Herrmann, Mark H.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Neely, Kelly A.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.; Ruggles, Larry; Smith, Ian C.; Schwarz, Jens; Simpson, Walter W.; Sinars, Daniel; Speas, Christopher S.; Tafoya-Porras, Belinda T.; Wenger, D.F.; Young, Ralph W.; Adams, Richard G.; Bennett, Guy R.; Campbell, David V.; Carroll, M.S.; Claus, Liam; Edens, Aaron; Geissel, Matthias

Abstract not provided.

X-ray optics on the Z-Accelerator backlit with the Z-Beamlet Laser & Z-Petawatt Laser systems

Gonzales, Rita A.; Gurrieri, Thomas; Herrmann, Mark H.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Neely, Kelly A.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.; Ruggles, Larry; Schwarz, Jens; Adams, Richard G.; Simpson, Walter W.; Sinars, Daniel; Smith, Ian C.; Speas, Christopher S.; Tafoya-Porras, Belinda T.; Wenger, D.F.; Young, Ralph W.; Edens, Aaron; Atherton, B.; Bennett, Guy R.; Campbell, David V.; Carroll, M.S.; Claus, Liam; Geissel, Matthias

Abstract not provided.

Towards a predictive MHD simulation capability for designing hypervelocity magnetically-driven flyer plates and PWclass z-pinch x-ray sources on Z and ZR

Mehlhorn, Thomas A.; Yu, Edmund; Vesey, Roger A.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Jones, Brent M.; Knudson, Marcus D.; Sinars, Daniel; Robinson, Allen C.; Trucano, Timothy G.; Brunner, Thomas A.; Desjarlais, Michael P.; Garasi, Christopher J.; Haill, Thomas A.; Hanshaw, Heath L.; Lemke, Raymond W.; Oliver, Bryan V.; Peterson, K.J.

Abstract not provided.

1- and 2-frame monochromatic x-ray imaging of NIF-like capsules on Z and future higher-energy higher-resolution 2- & 4-frame x-radiography plans for ZR

Bennett, Guy R.; Campbell, David V.; Claus, Liam; Foresi, James S.; Johnson, Drew; Jones, Michael; Keller, Keith L.; Leifeste, Gordon T.; Mcpherson, Leroy A.; Mulville, Thomas D.; Neely, Kelly A.; Sinars, Daniel; Herrmann, Mark H.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.; Ruggles, Larry; Simpson, Walter W.; Speas, Christopher S.; Wenger, D.F.; Smith, Ian C.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Adams, Richard G.; Atherton, B.; Barnard, Wilson J.; Beutler, David E.; Burr, Robert A.

Abstract not provided.

Progress in symmetric ICF capsule implosions and wire-array z-pinch source physics for double z-pinch driven hohlraums

Proposed for publication in Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion.

Cuneo, Michael E.; Nash, Thomas J.; Yu, Edmund; Mehlhorn, Thomas A.; Matzen, M.K.; Vesey, Roger A.; Bennett, Guy R.; Sinars, Daniel; Stygar, William A.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Smith, Ian C.; Bliss, David E.

Over the last several years, rapid progress has been made evaluating the double-z-pinch indirect-drive, inertial confinement fusion (ICF) high-yield target concept (Hammer et al 1999 Phys. Plasmas 6 2129). We have demonstrated efficient coupling of radiation from two wire-array-driven primary hohlraums to a secondary hohlraum that is large enough to drive a high yield ICF capsule. The secondary hohlraum is irradiated from two sides by z-pinches to produce low odd-mode radiation asymmetry. This double-pinch source is driven from a single electrical power feed (Cuneo et al 2002 Phys. Rev. Lett. 88 215004) on the 20 MA Z accelerator. The double z-pinch has imploded ICF capsules with even-mode radiation symmetry of 3.1 {+-} 1.4% and to high capsule radial convergence ratios of 14-21 (Bennett et al 2002 Phys. Rev. Lett. 89 245002; Bennett et al 2003 Phys. Plasmas 10 3717; Vesey et al 2003 Phys. Plasmas 10 1854). Advances in wire-array physics at 20 MA are improving our understanding of z-pinch power scaling with increasing drive current. Techniques for shaping the z-pinch radiation pulse necessary for low adiabat capsule compression have also been demonstrated.

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Tungsten wire number dependence of the implosion dynamics at the Z-accelerator

Plasma Devices and Operations

Mazarakis, Michael G.; Deeney, C.E.; Douglas, M.R.; Stygar, William A.; Sinars, Daniel; Cuneo, Michael E.; Chittenden, J.; Chandler, G.A.; Nash, T.J.; Struve, K.W.; McDaniel, D.H.

In this paper, we report the results of an experimental campaign to study the initiation, implosion dynamics and radiation yield of tungsten wire arrays as a function of the wire number. An optimization study of the X-ray emitted peak power, rise time and FWHM was effectuated by varying the wire number while keeping the total array mass constant at ∼5.8mg. The driver used was the ∼20MA Z-accelerator, in its usual short pulse mode of 100ns. We studied single arrays of diameter 20mm and height 10mm. The smaller wire number studied was 30 and the largest 600. It appears that 600 is the highest wire number achievable with present-day technology. Radial and axial diagnostics were used, including a crystal monochromatic X-ray backlighter. An optimum wire number of ∼370 was observed, which is very close to the number (300) routinely used for the ICF program in Sandia. © 2005 Taylor & Francis Group Ltd.

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Mass profile and instability growth measurements for 300-wire z-pinch implosions driven by 14-18, MA

Proposed for publication in Physical Review Letters.

Sinars, Daniel; Cuneo, Michael E.; Yu, Edmund; Bliss, David E.; Nash, Thomas J.; Deeney, Christopher D.; Mazarakis, Michael G.; Wenger, D.F.

We present the first comprehensive study of high wire-number, wire-array Z-pinch dynamics at 14-18 MA using x-ray backlighting and optical shadowgraphy diagnostics. The cylindrical arrays retain slowly expanding, dense wire cores at the initial position up to 60% of the total implosion time. Azimuthally correlated instabilities at the array edge appear during this stage which continue to grow in amplitude and wavelength after the start of bulk motion, resulting in measurable trailing mass that does not arrive on axis before peak x-ray emission.

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[Copy of characteristics and scaling of tungsten-wire-array z-pinch implosion dynamics at 20 MA.]

Proposed for publication in Physics of Plasmas.

Vesey, Roger A.; Yu, Edmund; Nash, Thomas J.; Bliss, David E.; Bennett, Guy R.; Sinars, Daniel; Simpson, Walter W.; Ruggles, Larry; Wenger, D.F.; Garasi, Christopher J.; Aragon, Rafael A.; Fowler, William E.; Johnson, Drew; Keller, Keith L.; McGurn, John S.; Mehlhorn, Thomas A.; Speas, Christopher S.; Struve, Kenneth; Stygar, William A.; Chandler, Gordon A.

Abstract not provided.

Z facility diagnostic system for high energy density physics at Sandia National Laboratories

Leeper, Ramon J.; Deeney, Christopher D.; Dunham, G.S.; Fehl, David L.; Franklin, James K.; Hanson, David L.; Hawn, Rona E.; Hall, Clint A.; Hurst, Michael J.; Jinzo, Tanya D.; Jobe, Daniel O.; Joseph, Nathan; Knudson, Marcus D.; Lake, Patrick; Lazier, Steven E.; Lucas, Joshua; McGurn, John S.; Manicke, Matthew P.; Mock, Raymond; Moore, Tracy C.; Nash, Thomas J.; Bailey, James E.; Nelson, Alan J.; Nielsen, D.S.; Olson, Richard E.; Porter, John L.; Pyle, John H.; Rochau, G.A.; Ruggles, Larry; Ruiz, Carlos L.; Sanford, Thomas W.L.; Seamen, Johann F.; Bennett, Guy R.; Simpson, Walter W.; Sinars, Daniel; Speas, Christopher S.; Stygar, William A.; Torres, Jose; Wenger, D.F.; Carlson, Alan L.; Chandler, Gordon A.; Cooper, Gary; Cuneo, Michael E.

Abstract not provided.

1-to 10-keV x-ray backlighting of annular wire arrays on the Sandia Z-machine using bent-crystal imaging techniques

Sinars, Daniel; Smith, Ian C.; Wenger, D.F.; Cuneo, Michael E.; Bennett, Guy R.; Anderson, Jessica E.; Porter, John L.; Rambo, Patrick K.; Rovang, Dean C.

Annular wire array implosions on the Sandia Z-machine can produce >200 TW and 1-2 MJ of soft x rays in the 0.1-10 keV range. The x-ray flux and debris in this environment present significant challenges for radiographic diagnostics. X-ray backlighting diagnostics at 1865 and 6181 eV using spherically-bent crystals have been fielded on the Z-machine, each with a {approx}0.6 eVspectral bandpass, 10 {micro}m spatial resolution, and a 4 mm by 20mm field of view. The Z-Beamlet laser, a 2-TW, 2-kJ Nd:glass laser({lambda} = 527 nm), is used to produce 0.1-1 J x-ray sources for radiography. The design, calibration, and performance of these diagnostics is presented.

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Experimental observation of plasma formation and current transfer in fine wire expansion experiments

Deeney, Christopher D.; Sinars, Daniel

When several kA pulses are passed through single, fine 25 {micro}m diameter wires, the wire material heats, melts, vaporizes and expands. Initially the voltage across--and current through--a wire increases until an abrupt voltage collapse occurs. After this collapse the voltage remains at a relative small value while the current continues to increase. In order to understand how this early time behavior may affect the subsequent implosion, small-scale experiments at Cornell University's Laboratory of Plasma Studies concentrated on diagnosing expanding single wire dynamics. X-ray backlighting, interferometry and Schlieren imaging as well as current and voltage measurements have been employed. The voltage collapse has been attributed to the formation of plasma around the wire and a transfer of current to this highly conducting coronal plasma. Interferometry has confirmed the plasma formation, but the current transfer has only been postulated. Subsequent experiments on the Z-Facility at Sandia National Laboratories have produced impressive x-ray yields etc.

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Results 201–327 of 327
Results 201–327 of 327