Baolian Cheng
Los Alamos National Laboratory
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Featured researches published by Baolian Cheng.
Physics of Plasmas | 2015
J. Melvin; Hyunkyung Lim; V. Rana; Baolian Cheng; James Glimm; David H. Sharp; D. C. Wilson
We determine the dependence of key Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) hot spot simulation properties on the deuterium-tritium fuel adiabat, here modified by addition of energy to the cold shell. Variation of this parameter reduces the simulation to experiment discrepancy in some, but not all, experimentally inferred quantities. Using simulations with radiation drives tuned to match experimental shots N120321 and N120405 from the National Ignition Campaign (NIC), we carry out sets of simulations with varying amounts of added entropy and examine the sensitivities of important experimental quantities. Neutron yields, burn widths, hot spot densities, and pressures follow a trend approaching their experimentally inferred quantities. Ion temperatures and areal densities are sensitive to the adiabat changes, but do not necessarily converge to their experimental quantities with the added entropy. This suggests that a modification to the simulation adiabat is one of, but not the only explanation of the observed sim...
Physics of Plasmas | 2015
Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Yi-Ming Wang; F. E. Merrill; C. Cerjan; S. H. Batha
We apply a recently developed analytical model of implosion and thermonuclear burn to fusion capsule experiments performed at the National Ignition Facility that used low-foot and high-foot laser pulse formats. Our theoretical predictions are consistent with the experimental data. Our studies, together with neutron image analysis, reveal that the adiabats of the cold fuel in both low-foot and high-foot experiments are similar. That is, the cold deuterium-tritium shells in those experiments are all in a high adiabat state at the time of peak implosion velocity. The major difference between low-foot and high-foot capsule experiments is the growth of the shock-induced instabilities developed at the material interfaces which lead to fuel mixing with ablator material. Furthermore, we have compared the NIF capsules performance with the ignition criteria and analyzed the alpha particle heating in the NIF experiments. Our analysis shows that alpha heating was appreciable only in the high-foot experiments.
Physical Review E | 2017
V. Rana; H. Lim; J. Melvin; James Glimm; Baolian Cheng; D. H. Sharp
Approximate one-dimensional (1D) as well as 2D and 3D simulations are playing an important supporting role in the design and analysis of future experiments at National Ignition Facility. This paper is mainly concerned with 1D simulations, used extensively in design and optimization. We couple a 1D buoyancy-drag mix model for the mixing zone edges with a 1D inertial confinement fusion simulation code. This analysis predicts that National Ignition Campaign (NIC) designs are located close to a performance cliff, so modeling errors, design features (fill tube and tent) and additional, unmodeled instabilities could lead to significant levels of mix. The performance cliff we identify is associated with multimode plastic ablator (CH) mix into the hot-spot deuterium and tritium (DT). The buoyancy-drag mix model is mode number independent and selects implicitly a range of maximum growth modes. Our main conclusion is that single effect instabilities are predicted not to lead to hot-spot mix, while combined mode mixing effects are predicted to affect hot-spot thermodynamics and possibly hot-spot mix. Combined with the stagnation Rayleigh-Taylor instability, we find the potential for mix effects in combination with the ice-to-gas DT boundary, numerical effects of Eulerian species CH concentration diffusion, and ablation-driven instabilities. With the help of a convenient package of plasma transport parameters developed here, we give an approximate determination of these quantities in the regime relevant to the NIC experiments, while ruling out a variety of mix possibilities. Plasma transport parameters affect the 1D buoyancy-drag mix model primarily through its phenomenological drag coefficient as well as the 1D hydro model to which the buoyancy-drag equation is coupled.
Physics of Plasmas | 2016
Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Yi-Ming Wang; S. A. Yi; S. H. Batha; F.J. Wysocki
We demonstrate the effect of preheat, hydrodynamic mix and vorticity on the adiabat of the deuterium-tritium (DT) fuel in fusion capsule experiments. We show that the adiabat of the DT fuel increases resulting from hydrodynamic mixing due to the phenomenon of entropy of mixture. An upper limit of mix, Mclean/MDTu2009≥u20090.98, is found necessary to keep the DT fuel on a low adiabat. We demonstrate in this study that the use of a high adiabat for the DT fuel in theoretical analysis and with the aid of 1D code simulations could explain some aspects of 3D effects and mix in capsule implosion. Furthermore, we can infer from our physics model and the observed neutron images the adiabat of the DT fuel in the capsule and the amount of mix produced on the hot spot.
Physical Review E | 2013
Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Yi-Ming Wang; S. H. Batha
Physical Review E | 2018
Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; S. A. Yi; O. L. Landen; Yi-Ming Wang; C. Cerjan; S. H. Batha; F. J. Wysocki
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2016
Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Yi-Ming Wang; Sunghuan Yi; S. H. Batha
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Yi-Ming Wang; F. E. Merrill; C. Cerjan; S. H. Batha
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2015
Yi-Ming Wang; Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; F. E. Merrill; C. Cerjan; S. H. Batha
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2014
Baolian Cheng; Thomas J. T. Kwan; Yi-Ming Wang; S. H. Batha