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Featured researches published by D. Hoover.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

High-density carbon ablator experiments on the National Ignition Facilitya)

A. J. Mackinnon; N. B. Meezan; J. S. Ross; S. Le Pape; L. Berzak Hopkins; L. Divol; D. Ho; J. Milovich; A. Pak; J. E. Ralph; T. Döppner; P. K. Patel; C. A. Thomas; R. Tommasini; S. Haan; A. G. MacPhee; J. McNaney; J. Caggiano; R. Hatarik; R. Bionta; T. Ma; B. Spears; J. R. Rygg; L. R. Benedetti; R. P. J. Town; D. K. Bradley; E. L. Dewald; D. Fittinghoff; O. S. Jones; H. R. Robey

High Density Carbon (HDC) is a leading candidate as an ablator material for Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) capsules in x-ray (indirect) drive implosions. HDC has a higher density (3.5 g/cc) than plastic (CH, 1 g/cc), which results in a thinner ablator with a larger inner radius for a given capsule scale. This leads to higher x-ray absorption and shorter laser pulses compared to equivalent CH designs. This paper will describe a series of experiments carried out to examine the feasibility of using HDC as an ablator using both gas filled hohlraums and lower density, near vacuum hohlraums. These experiments have shown that deuterium (DD) and deuterium-tritium gas filled HDC capsules driven by a hohlraum filled with 1.2 mg/cc He gas, produce neutron yields a factor of 2× higher than equivalent CH implosions, representing better than 50% Yield-over-Clean (YoC). In a near vacuum hohlraum (He = 0.03 mg/cc) with 98% laser-to-hohlraum coupling, such a DD gas-filled capsule performed near 1D expectations. A cryogenic layered implosion version was consistent with a fuel velocity = 410 ± 20 km/s with no observed ablator mixing into the hot spot.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

An in-flight radiography platform to measure hydrodynamic instability growth in inertial confinement fusion capsules at the National Ignition Facility

K. S. Raman; V. A. Smalyuk; D. T. Casey; S. W. Haan; D. Hoover; O. A. Hurricane; J. J. Kroll; A. Nikroo; J. L. Peterson; B. A. Remington; H. F. Robey; D. S. Clark; B. A. Hammel; O. L. Landen; M. M. Marinak; D. H. Munro; Kyle Peterson; J. D. Salmonson

A new in-flight radiography platform has been established at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) to measure Rayleigh–Taylor and Richtmyer–Meshkov instability growth in inertial confinement fusion capsules. The platform has been tested up to a convergence ratio of 4. An experimental campaign is underway to measure the growth of pre-imposed sinusoidal modulations of the capsule surface, as a function of wavelength, for a pair of ignition-relevant laser drives: a “low-foot” drive representative of what was fielded during the National Ignition Campaign (NIC) [Edwards et al., Phys. Plasmas 20, 070501 (2013)] and the new high-foot [Dittrich et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 055002 (2014); Park et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 055001 (2014)] pulse shape, for which the predicted instability growth is much lower. We present measurements of Legendre modes 30, 60, and 90 for the NIC-type, low-foot, drive, and modes 60 and 90 for the high-foot drive. The measured growth is consistent with model predictions, including much less growth for the high-foot drive, demonstrating the instability mitigation aspect of this new pulse shape. We present the design of the platform in detail and discuss the implications of the data it generates for the on-going ignition effort at NIF.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Hydrodynamic instability growth and mix experiments at the National Ignition Facilitya)

V. A. Smalyuk; M. A. Barrios; J. A. Caggiano; D. T. Casey; C. Cerjan; D. S. Clark; M. J. Edwards; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu-Johnson; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; G. P. Grim; S. W. Haan; B. A. Hammel; Alex V. Hamza; D. Hoover; W. W. Hsing; O. A. Hurricane; J. D. Kilkenny; J. L. Kline; J. P. Knauer; J. J. Kroll; O. L. Landen; J. D. Lindl; T. Ma; J. McNaney; M. Mintz; A. S. Moore; A. Nikroo; T. Parham; J. L. Peterson

Hydrodynamic instability growth and its effects on implosion performance were studied at the National Ignition Facility [G. H. Miller, E. I. Moses, and C. R. Wuest, Opt. Eng. 443, 2841 (2004)]. Implosion performance and mix have been measured at peak compression using plastic shells filled with tritium gas and containing embedded localized carbon-deuterium diagnostic layers in various locations in the ablator. Neutron yield and ion temperature of the deuterium-tritium fusion reactions were used as a measure of shell-gas mix, while neutron yield of the tritium-tritium fusion reaction was used as a measure of implosion performance. The results have indicated that the low-mode hydrodynamic instabilities due to surface roughness were the primary culprits for yield degradation, with atomic ablator-gas mix playing a secondary role. In addition, spherical shells with pre-imposed 2D modulations were used to measure instability growth in the acceleration phase of the implosions. The capsules were imploded using ig...


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Cryogenic tritium-hydrogen-deuterium and deuterium-tritium layer implosions with high density carbon ablators in near-vacuum hohlraums

N. B. Meezan; L. Berzak Hopkins; S. Le Pape; L. Divol; A. J. Mackinnon; T. Döppner; D. Ho; O. S. Jones; S. F. Khan; T. Ma; J. L. Milovich; A. Pak; J. S. Ross; C. A. Thomas; L.R. Benedetti; D. K. Bradley; Peter M. Celliers; D. S. Clark; J. E. Field; S. W. Haan; N. Izumi; G. A. Kyrala; J. D. Moody; P. K. Patel; J. E. Ralph; J. R. Rygg; S. M. Sepke; B. K. Spears; R. Tommasini; R. P. J. Town

High Density Carbon (or diamond) is a promising ablator material for use in near-vacuum hohlraums, as its high density allows for ignition designs with laser pulse durations of <10 ns. A series of Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) experiments in 2013 on the National Ignition Facility [Moses et al., Phys. Plasmas 16, 041006 (2009)] culminated in a deuterium-tritium (DT) layered implosion driven by a 6.8 ns, 2-shock laser pulse. This paper describes these experiments and comparisons with ICF design code simulations. Backlit radiography of a tritium-hydrogen-deuterium (THD) layered capsule demonstrated an ablator implosion velocity of 385 km/s with a slightly oblate hot spot shape. Other diagnostics suggested an asymmetric compressed fuel layer. A streak camera-based hot spot self-emission diagnostic (SPIDER) showed a double-peaked history of the capsule self-emission. Simulations suggest that this is a signature of low quality hot spot formation. Changes to the laser pulse and pointing for a subsequent DT i...


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Hydrodynamic instability growth of three-dimensional, “native-roughness” modulations in x-ray driven, spherical implosions at the National Ignition Facility

V. A. Smalyuk; S. V. Weber; D. T. Casey; D. S. Clark; J. E. Field; S. W. Haan; B. A. Hammel; Alex V. Hamza; D. Hoover; O. L. Landen; A. Nikroo; H. F. Robey; C. R. Weber

Hydrodynamic instability growth experiments with three-dimensional (3-D) surface-roughness modulations were performed on plastic (CH) shell spherical implosions at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [E. M. Campbell, R. Cauble, and B. A. Remington, AIP Conf. Proc. 429, 3 (1998)]. The initial capsule outer-surface roughness was similar to the standard specifications (“native roughness”) used in a majority of implosions on NIF. The experiments included instability growth measurements of the perturbations seeded by the thin membranes (or tents) used to hold the capsules inside the hohlraums. In addition, initial modulations included two divots used as spatial fiducials to determine the convergence in the experiments and to check the accuracy of 3D simulations in calculating growth of known initial perturbations. The instability growth measurements were performed using x-ray, through-foil radiography of one side of the imploding shell, based on time-resolved pinhole imaging. Averaging over 30 similar images ...


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Performance of indirectly driven capsule implosions on the National Ignition Facility using adiabat-shaping

H. F. Robey; V. A. Smalyuk; J. L. Milovich; T. Döppner; D. T. Casey; K. L. Baker; J. L. Peterson; B. Bachmann; L. Berzak Hopkins; E. Bond; J. A. Caggiano; D. A. Callahan; Peter M. Celliers; C. Cerjan; D. S. Clark; S. Dixit; M. J. Edwards; N. Gharibyan; S. W. Haan; B. A. Hammel; Alex V. Hamza; R. Hatarik; O. A. Hurricane; K. S. Jancaitis; O. S. Jones; G.D. Kerbel; J. J. Kroll; K. N. Lafortune; O. L. Landen; T. Ma

A series of indirectly driven capsule implosions has been performed on the National Ignition Facility to assess the relative contributions of ablation-front instability growth vs. fuel compression on implosion performance. Laser pulse shapes for both low and high-foot pulses were modified to vary ablation-front growth and fuel adiabat, separately and controllably. Three principal conclusions are drawn from this study: (1) It is shown that reducing ablation-front instability growth in low-foot implosions results in a substantial (3-10X) increase in neutron yield with no loss of fuel compression. (2) It is shown that reducing the fuel adiabat in high-foot implosions results in a significant (36%) increase in fuel compression together with a small (10%) increase in neutron yield. (3) Increased electron preheat at higher laser power in high-foot implosions, however, appears to offset the gain in compression achieved by adiabat-shaping at lower power. These results taken collectively bridge the space between t...


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

First results of radiation-driven, layered deuterium-tritium implosions with a 3-shock adiabat-shaped drive at the National Ignition Facility

V. A. Smalyuk; H. F. Robey; T. Döppner; O. S. Jones; J. L. Milovich; B. Bachmann; K. L. Baker; L. Berzak Hopkins; E. Bond; D. A. Callahan; D. T. Casey; Peter M. Celliers; C. Cerjan; D. S. Clark; S. Dixit; M. J. Edwards; E. Giraldez; S. W. Haan; Alex V. Hamza; M. Hohenberger; D. Hoover; O. A. Hurricane; K. S. Jancaitis; J. J. Kroll; K. N. Lafortune; O. L. Landen; B. J. MacGowan; A. G. MacPhee; A. Nikroo; A. Pak

Radiation-driven, layered deuterium-tritium plastic capsule implosions were carried out using a new, 3-shock “adiabat-shaped” drive on the National Ignition Facility. The purpose of adiabat shaping is to use a stronger first shock, reducing hydrodynamic instability growth in the ablator. The shock can decay before reaching the deuterium-tritium fuel leaving it on a low adiabat and allowing higher fuel compression. The fuel areal density was improved by ∼25% with this new drive compared to similar “high-foot” implosions, while neutron yield was improved by more than 4 times, compared to “low-foot” implosions driven at the same compression and implosion velocity.


Physics of Plasmas | 2014

Development of the CD Symcap platform to study gas-shell mix in implosions at the National Ignition Facility

D. T. Casey; V. A. Smalyuk; Robert Tipton; J. Pino; Gary P. Grim; B. A. Remington; Dana P. Rowley; S. V. Weber; M. A. Barrios; L. R. Benedetti; D. L. Bleuel; E. Bond; David K. Bradley; J. A. Caggiano; D. A. Callahan; Charles Cerjan; K. C. Chen; D. H. Edgell; M. J. Edwards; D. N. Fittinghoff; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu-Johnson; Vladimir Yu. Glebov; S. Glenn; N. Guler; S. W. Haan; Alex V. Hamza; R. Hatarik; H. W. Herrmann; D. Hoover

Surrogate implosions play an important role at the National Ignition Facility (NIF) for isolating aspects of the complex physical processes associated with fully integrated ignition experiments. The newly developed CD Symcap platform has been designed to study gas-shell mix in indirectly driven, pure T2-gas filled CH-shell implosions equipped with 4 μm thick CD layers. This configuration provides a direct nuclear signature of mix as the DT yield (above a characterized D contamination background) is produced by D from the CD layer in the shell, mixing into the T-gas core. The CD layer can be placed at different locations within the CH shell to probe the depth and extent of mix. CD layers placed flush with the gas-shell interface and recessed up to 8 μm have shown that most of the mix occurs at the inner-shell surface. In addition, time-gated x-ray images of the hotspot show large brightly radiating objects traversing through the hotspot around bang-time, which are likely chunks of CH/CD plastic. This platf...


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

First beryllium capsule implosions on the National Ignition Facility

J. L. Kline; S. A. Yi; Andrei N. Simakov; R. E. Olson; D. C. Wilson; G. A. Kyrala; T. S. Perry; S. H. Batha; A. Zylstra; E. L. Dewald; R. Tommasini; J. E. Ralph; D. J. Strozzi; A. G. MacPhee; D. A. Callahan; D. E. Hinkel; O. A. Hurricane; J. L. Milovich; J. R. Rygg; S. F. Khan; S. W. Haan; Peter M. Celliers; D. S. Clark; B. A. Hammel; B. J. Kozioziemski; M. B. Schneider; M. M. Marinak; H. G. Rinderknecht; H. F. Robey; J. D. Salmonson

The first indirect drive implosion experiments using Beryllium (Be) capsules at the National Ignition Facility confirm the superior ablation properties and elucidate possible Be-ablator issues such as hohlraum filling by ablator material. Since the 1990s, Be has been the preferred Inertial Confinement Fusion (ICF) ablator because of its higher mass ablation rate compared to that of carbon-based ablators. This enables ICF target designs with higher implosion velocities at lower radiation temperatures and improved hydrodynamic stability through greater ablative stabilization. Recent experiments to demonstrate the viability of Be ablator target designs measured the backscattered laser energy, capsule implosion velocity, core implosion shape from self-emission, and in-flight capsule shape from backlit imaging. The laser backscatter is similar to that from comparable plastic (CH) targets under the same hohlraum conditions. Implosion velocity measurements from backlit streaked radiography show that laser energy coupling to the hohlraum wall is comparable to plastic ablators. The measured implosion shape indicates no significant reduction of laser energy from the inner laser cone beams reaching the hohlraum wall as compared with plastic and high-density carbon ablators. These results indicate that the high mass ablation rate for beryllium capsules does not significantly alter hohlraum energetics. In addition, these data, together with data for low fill-density hohlraum performance, indicate that laser power multipliers, required to reconcile simulations with experimental observations, are likely due to our limited understanding of the hohlraum rather than the capsule physics since similar multipliers are needed for both Be and CH capsules as seen in experiments.


Physics of Plasmas | 2016

Experimental results of radiation-driven, layered deuterium-tritium implosions with adiabat-shaped drives at the National Ignition Facility

V. A. Smalyuk; H. F. Robey; T. Döppner; D. T. Casey; D. S. Clark; O. S. Jones; J. L. Milovich; J. L. Peterson; B. Bachmann; K. L. Baker; L. R. Benedetti; L. Berzak Hopkins; R. Bionta; E. Bond; D. K. Bradley; D. A. Callahan; Peter M. Celliers; C. Cerjan; K. C. Chen; C. Goyon; G. P. Grim; S. Dixit; M. J. Eckart; M. J. Edwards; M. Farrell; D. N. Fittinghoff; J. A. Frenje; M. Gatu-Johnson; N. Gharibyan; S. W. Haan

Radiation-driven, layered deuterium-tritium (DT) implosions were carried out using 3-shock and 4-shock “adiabat-shaped” drives and plastic ablators on the National Ignition Facility (NIF) [E. M. Campbell et al., AIP Conf. Proc. 429, 3 (1998)]. The purpose of these shots was to gain further understanding on the relative performance of the low-foot implosions of the National Ignition Campaign [M. J. Edwards et al., Phys. Plasmas 20, 070501 (2013)] versus the subsequent high-foot implosions [T. Doppner et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 115, 055001 (2015)]. The neutron yield performance in the experiment with the 4-shock adiabat-shaped drive was improved by factors ∼3 to ∼10, compared to five companion low-foot shots despite large low-mode asymmetries of DT fuel, while measured compression was similar to its low-foot companions. This indicated that the dominant degradation source for low-foot implosions was ablation-front instability growth, since adiabat shaping significantly stabilized this growth. For the experiment with the low-power 3-shock adiabat-shaped drive, the DT fuel compression was significantly increased, by ∼25% to ∼36%, compared to its companion high-foot implosions. The neutron yield increased by ∼20%, lower than the increase of ∼50% estimated from one-dimensional scaling, suggesting the importance of residual instabilities and asymmetries. For the experiment with the high-power, 3-shock adiabat-shaped drive, the DT fuel compression was slightly increased by ∼14% compared to its companion high-foot experiments. However, the compression was reduced compared to the lower-power 3-shock adiabat-shaped drive, correlated with the increase of hot electrons that hypothetically can be responsible for reduced compression in high-power adiabat-shaped experiments as well as in high-foot experiments. The total neutron yield in the high-power 3-shock adiabat-shaped shot N150416 was 8.5 × 1015 ± 0.2 × 1015, with the fuel areal density of 0.90 ± 0.07 g/cm2, corresponding to the ignition threshold factor parameter IFTX (calculated without alpha heating) of 0.34 ± 0.03 and the yield amplification due to the alpha heating of 2.4 ± 0.2. The performance parameters were among the highest of all shots on NIF and the closest to ignition at this time, based on the IFTX metric. The follow-up experiments were proposed to continue testing physics hypotheses, to measure implosion reproducibility, and to improve quantitative understanding on present implosion results.

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S. W. Haan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. S. Clark

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. T. Casey

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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L. Berzak Hopkins

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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H. F. Robey

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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D. A. Callahan

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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J. L. Milovich

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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A. Nikroo

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Alex V. Hamza

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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