Literature DB >> 26024175

Direct heating of a laser-imploded core by ultraintense laser-driven ions.

Y Kitagawa1, Y Mori1, O Komeda1, K Ishii1, R Hanayama1, K Fujita1, S Okihara1, T Sekine2, N Satoh2, T Kurita2, M Takagi2, T Watari2, T Kawashima2, H Kan2, Y Nishimura3, A Sunahara4, Y Sentoku5, N Nakamura6, T Kondo6, M Fujine6, H Azuma7, T Motohiro7, T Hioki7, M Kakeno7, E Miura8, Y Arikawa9, T Nagai9, Y Abe9, S Ozaki10, A Noda11.   

Abstract

A novel direct core heating fusion process is introduced, in which a preimploded core is predominantly heated by energetic ions driven by LFEX, an extremely energetic ultrashort pulse laser. Consequently, we have observed the D(d,n)^{3}He-reacted neutrons (DD beam-fusion neutrons) with the yield of 5×10^{8} n/4π sr. Examination of the beam-fusion neutrons verified that the ions directly collide with the core plasma. While the hot electrons heat the whole core volume, the energetic ions deposit their energies locally in the core, forming hot spots for fuel ignition. As evidenced in the spectrum, the process simultaneously excited thermal neutrons with the yield of 6×10^{7} n/4π sr, raising the local core temperature from 0.8 to 1.8 keV. A one-dimensional hydrocode STAR 1D explains the shell implosion dynamics including the beam fusion and thermal fusion initiated by fast deuterons and carbon ions. A two-dimensional collisional particle-in-cell code predicts the core heating due to resistive processes driven by hot electrons, and also the generation of fast ions, which could be an additional heating source when they reach the core. Since the core density is limited to 2 g/cm^{3} in the current experiment, neither hot electrons nor fast ions can efficiently deposit their energy and the neutron yield remains low. In future work, we will achieve the higher core density (>10 g/cm^{3}); then hot electrons could contribute more to the core heating via drag heating. Together with hot electrons, the ion contribution to fast ignition is indispensable for realizing high-gain fusion. By virtue of its core heating and ignition, the proposed scheme can potentially achieve high gain fusion.

Entities:  

Year:  2015        PMID: 26024175     DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.195002

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Phys Rev Lett        ISSN: 0031-9007            Impact factor:   9.161


  3 in total

1.  Dense blocks of energetic ions driven by multi-petawatt lasers.

Authors:  S M Weng; M Liu; Z M Sheng; M Murakami; M Chen; L L Yu; J Zhang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-02-29       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Energy penetration into arrays of aligned nanowires irradiated with relativistic intensities: Scaling to terabar pressures.

Authors:  Clayton Bargsten; Reed Hollinger; Maria Gabriela Capeluto; Vural Kaymak; Alexander Pukhov; Shoujun Wang; Alex Rockwood; Yong Wang; David Keiss; Riccardo Tommasini; Richard London; Jaebum Park; Michel Busquet; Marcel Klapisch; Vyacheslav N Shlyaptsev; Jorge J Rocca
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2017-01-11       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Micro-scale fusion in dense relativistic nanowire array plasmas.

Authors:  Alden Curtis; Chase Calvi; James Tinsley; Reed Hollinger; Vural Kaymak; Alexander Pukhov; Shoujun Wang; Alex Rockwood; Yong Wang; Vyacheslav N Shlyaptsev; Jorge J Rocca
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2018-03-14       Impact factor: 14.919

  3 in total

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