Direct heating of a laser-imploded core using ultraintense laser LFEX

作者:Kitagawa Y*; Mori Y; Ishii K; Hanayama R; Nishimura Y; Okihara S; Nakayama S; Sekine T; Takagi M; Watari T; Satoh N; Kawashima T; Komeda O; Hioki T; Motohiro T; Azuma H; Sunahara A; Sentoku Y; Arikawa Y; Abe Y; Miura E; Ozaki T
来源:Nuclear Fusion, 2017, 57(7): 076030.
DOI:10.1088/1741-4326/aa70bc

摘要

A CD shell was preimploded by two counter-propagating green beams from the GEKKO laser system GXII (based at the Institute of Laser Engineering, Osaka University), forming a dense core. The core was predominantly heated by energetic ions driven by the laser for fastignition- fusion experiment, an extremely energetic ultrashort pulse laser, that is illuminated perpendicularly to the GXII axis. Consequently, we observed the D(d, n)(3) He-reacted neutrons (DD beam-fusion neutrons) at a yield of 5x10(8) n/4 pi sr. The beam-fusion neutrons verified that the ions directly collided with the core plasma. Whereas the hot electrons heated the whole core volume, the energetic ions deposited their energies locally in the core. As evidenced in the spectrum, the process simultaneously excited thermal neutrons with a yield of 6x10(7) n/4 pi sr, raising the local core temperature from 0.8 to 1.8 keV. The shell-implosion dynamics (including the beam fusion and thermal fusion initiated by fast deuterons and carbon ions) can be explained by the one-dimensional hydrocode STAR 1D. Meanwhile, the core heating due to resistive processes driven by hot electrons, and also the generation of fast ions were wellpredicted by the two-dimensional collisional particle-in-cell code. 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.

  • 出版日期2017-7

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