Transient thermo-mechanical behavior of a direct-drive target during injection in an inertial fusion energy chamber |
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Authors: | Kurt-J Boehm A René Raffray |
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Affiliation: | University of California, San Diego, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering and Center for Energy Research, 460 EBU-II, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, CA 92093-0438, United States |
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Abstract: | During injection in an inertial fusion energy (IFE) chamber, a direct-drive target is subject to heat loads from chamber wall radiation and energy exchange from the chamber gas constituents. These heat loads can lead to the deuterium-tritium (DT) reaching its triple point temperature and even undergoing phase change, leading to unacceptable non-uniformity based on target physics requirements for compression and ignition of the DT fuel pellets using multiple laser beams. A two-dimensional bubble nucleation mode was added to the previously presented thermo-mechanical model to help better define the design margin for direct-drive IFE targets. The new model was validated by comparison with analytical results for controlled cases. It was then used to simulate heating experiments on DT targets conducted at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), where the 3He present in the DT due to tritium decay was found to affect the nucleation process.The previous requirement for target survival was for the temperature of the DT to remain below triple point of DT (19.79 K). If the existence of a melt layer does not violate the symmetry requirements on the target for successful implosion, the constraint could be relaxed by assuming a limit based on the avoidance of bubble nucleation. This study shows that the thresholds for melting and bubble nucleation are significantly different, allowing for extra margin in target survival under this assumption. |
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Keywords: | IFE target survival 3He bubble formation DT phase change |
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