I. C. Smith
Sandia National Laboratories
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Featured researches published by I. C. Smith.
Physics of Plasmas | 2005
M. Keith Matzen; M. A. Sweeney; R. G. Adams; J. R. Asay; J. E. Bailey; Guy R. Bennett; D.E. Bliss; Douglas D. Bloomquist; T. A. Brunner; Robert B. Campbell; Gordon Andrew Chandler; C.A. Coverdale; M. E. Cuneo; Jean-Paul Davis; C. Deeney; Michael P. Desjarlais; G. L. Donovan; Christopher Joseph Garasi; Thomas A. Haill; C. A. Hall; D.L. Hanson; M. J. Hurst; B. Jones; M. D. Knudson; R. J. Leeper; R.W. Lemke; M.G. Mazarakis; D. H. McDaniel; T.A. Mehlhorn; T. J. Nash
The Z accelerator [R. B. Spielman, W. A. Stygar, J. F. Seamen et al., Proceedings of the 11th International Pulsed Power Conference, Baltimore, MD, 1997, edited by G. Cooperstein and I. Vitkovitsky (IEEE, Piscataway, NJ, 1997), Vol. 1, p. 709] at Sandia National Laboratories delivers ∼20MA load currents to create high magnetic fields (>1000T) and high pressures (megabar to gigabar). In a z-pinch configuration, the magnetic pressure (the Lorentz force) supersonically implodes a plasma created from a cylindrical wire array, which at stagnation typically generates a plasma with energy densities of about 10MJ∕cm3 and temperatures >1keV at 0.1% of solid density. These plasmas produce x-ray energies approaching 2MJ at powers >200TW for inertial confinement fusion (ICF) and high energy density physics (HEDP) experiments. In an alternative configuration, the large magnetic pressure directly drives isentropic compression experiments to pressures >3Mbar and accelerates flyer plates to >30km∕s for equation of state ...
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2004
Daniel Brian Sinars; Guy R. Bennett; David Franklin Wenger; M. E. Cuneo; D.L. Hanson; John L. Porter; R. G. Adams; Patrick K. Rambo; Dean C. Rovang; I. C. Smith
The Z facility is a 20 MA, 100 ns rise time, pulsed power driver for z-pinch plasma radiation sources. The Z facility can make >200 TW, 1–2 MJ, near-blackbody radiation sources through the compression of cylindrical wire arrays. These sources are being used as drivers to study inertial-confinement fusion capsule implosions, complex radiation–hydrodynamic jet experiments, and wire-array z-pinch physics tests. To backlight plasmas in this environment we have built diagnostics based on spherically bent crystals that provide high spatial resolution (9–10 μm), a narrow spectral bandpass (<0.5 eV), and a large field of view (4 mm×20 mm). These diagnostics use the 2 TW, multi-kJ Z-Beamlet laser to produce x-ray emission sources at 1.865 or 6.151 keV for backlighting.
Applied Optics | 2005
Patrick K. Rambo; I. C. Smith; John L. Porter; Michael James Hurst; C. Shane Speas; R. G. Adams; Antonio J. Garcia; Ellis Dawson; Benjamin D. Thurston; Colleen Wakefield; Jeff W. Kellogg; Michael J. Slattery; H.C. Ives; Robin Scott Broyles; John A. Caird; Alvin C. Erlandson; James E. Murray; William C. Behrendt; Norman D. Neilsen; Joseph M. Narduzzi
A large-aperture (30-cm) kilojoule-class Nd:glass laser system known as Z-Beamlet has been constructed to perform x-ray radiography of high-energy-density science experiments conducted on the Z facility at Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico. The laser, operating with typical pulse durations from 0.3 to 1.5 ns, employs a sequence of successively larger multipass amplifiers to achieve up to 3-kJ energy at 1054 nm. Large-aperture frequency conversion and long-distance beam transport can provide on-target energies of up to 1.5 kJ at 527 nm.
Physics of Plasmas | 2006
M. E. Cuneo; Daniel Brian Sinars; E.M. Waisman; D.E. Bliss; W. A. Stygar; Roger Alan Vesey; R.W. Lemke; I. C. Smith; Patrick K. Rambo; John L. Porter; Gordon Andrew Chandler; T. J. Nash; M.G. Mazarakis; R. G. Adams; E. P. Yu; K.W. Struve; T.A. Mehlhorn; S. V. Lebedev; J. P. Chittenden; Christopher A. Jennings
Wire-array z pinches show promise as a high-power, efficient, reproducible, and low-cost x-ray source for high-yield indirect-drive inertial confinement fusion. Recently, rapid progress has been made in our understanding of the implosion dynamics of compact (20-mm-diam), high-current (11–19MA), single and nested wire arrays. As at lower currents (1–3MA), a single wire array (and both the outer and inner array of a nested system), show a variety of effects that arise from the initially discrete nature of the wires: a long wire ablation phase for 50%-80% of the current pulse width, an axial modulation of the ablation rate prior to array motion, a larger ablation rate for larger diameter wires, trailing mass, and trailing current. Compact nested wire arrays operate in current-transfer or transparent mode because the inner wires remain discrete during the outer array implosion, even for interwire gaps in the outer and inner arrays as small as 0.21mm. These array physics insights have led to nested arrays that...
Physics of Plasmas | 2011
Daniel Brian Sinars; Stephen A. Slutz; Mark Herrmann; R. D. McBride; M. E. Cuneo; Christopher A. Jennings; J. P. Chittenden; A.L. Velikovich; Kyle Peterson; Roger Alan Vesey; C. Nakhleh; E.M. Waisman; B.E. Blue; K. Killebrew; D. G. Schroen; Kurt Tomlinson; Aaron Edens; M. R. Lopez; I. C. Smith; Jonathon Shores; V. Bigman; Guy R. Bennett; Briggs Atherton; M. E. Savage; W. A. Stygar; G. T. Leifeste; John L. Porter
A recent publication [D. B. Sinars et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 185001 (2010)] describes the first controlled experiments measuring the growth of the magneto-Rayleigh–Taylor instability in fast (∼100 ns) Z-pinch plasmas formed from initially solid aluminum tubes (liners). Sinusoidal perturbations on the surface of these liners with wavelengths of 25–400 μm were used to seed single-mode instabilities. The evolution of the outer liner surface was captured using multiframe 6.151 keV radiography. The initial paper shows that there is good agreement between the data and 2-D radiation magneto-hydrodynamic simulations down to 50 μm wavelengths. This paper extends the previous one by providing more detailed radiography images, detailed target characterization data, a more accurate comparison to analytic models for the amplitude growth, the first data from a beryllium liner, and comparisons between the data and 3D simulations.
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2006
M. E. Cuneo; Roger Alan Vesey; Guy R. Bennett; Daniel Brian Sinars; W. A. Stygar; E.M. Waisman; John L. Porter; Patrick K. Rambo; I. C. Smith; S. V. Lebedev; J. P. Chittenden; D.E. Bliss; T. J. Nash; Gordon Andrew Chandler; Bedros Afeyan; E. P. Yu; Robert B. Campbell; R. G. Adams; D.L. Hanson; T.A. Mehlhorn; M. K. Matzen
Over the last several years, rapid progress has been made evaluating the double-z-pinch indirect-drive, inertial confinement fusion (ICF) high-yield target concept (Hammer et al 1999 Phys. Plasmas 6 2129). We have demonstrated efficient coupling of radiation from two wire-array-driven primary hohlraums to a secondary hohlraum that is large enough to drive a high yield ICF capsule. The secondary hohlraum is irradiated from two sides by z-pinches to produce low odd-mode radiation asymmetry. This double-pinch source is driven from a single electrical power feed (Cuneo et al 2002 Phys. Rev. Lett. 88 215004) on the 20 MA Z accelerator. The double z-pinch has imploded ICF capsules with even-mode radiation symmetry of 3.1 ± 1.4% and to high capsule radial convergence ratios of 14–21 (Bennett et al 2002 Phys. Rev. Lett. 89 245002; Bennett et al 2003 Phys. Plasmas 10 3717; Vesey et al 2003 Phys. Plasmas 10 1854). Advances in wire-array physics at 20 MA are improving our understanding of z-pinch power scaling with increasing drive current. Techniques for shaping the z-pinch radiation pulse necessary for low adiabat capsule compression have also been demonstrated.
Physics of Plasmas | 2013
Ryan D McBride; M. R. Martin; R.W. Lemke; J. B. Greenly; Christopher A. Jennings; Dean C. Rovang; Daniel Brian Sinars; M. E. Cuneo; Mark Herrmann; Stephen A. Slutz; C. Nakhleh; D. D. Ryutov; Jean-Paul Davis; Dawn G. Flicker; B.E. Blue; Kurt Tomlinson; D. G. Schroen; R. M. Stamm; G. E. Smith; J. K. Moore; T. J. Rogers; G. K. Robertson; R. J. Kamm; I. C. Smith; M. E. Savage; W. A. Stygar; G. A. Rochau; M. Jones; M. R. Lopez; John L. Porter
Multiple experimental campaigns have been executed to study the implosions of initially solid beryllium (Be) liners (tubes) on the Z pulsed-power accelerator. The implosions were driven by current pulses that rose from 0 to 20 MA in either 100 or 200 ns (200 ns for pulse shaping experiments). These studies were conducted in support of the recently proposed Magnetized Liner Inertial Fusion concept [Slutz et al., Phys. Plasmas 17, 056303 (2010)], as well as for exploring novel equation-of-state measurement techniques. The experiments used thick-walled liners that had an aspect ratio (initial outer radius divided by initial wall thickness) of either 3.2, 4, or 6. From these studies, we present three new primary results. First, we present radiographic images of imploding Be liners, where each liner contained a thin aluminum sleeve for enhancing the contrast and visibility of the liners inner surface in the images. These images allow us to assess the stability of the liners inner surface more accurately and more directly than was previously possible. Second, we present radiographic images taken early in the implosion (prior to any motion of the liners inner surface) of a shockwave propagating radially inward through the liner wall. Radial mass density profiles from these shock compression experiments are contrasted with profiles from experiments where the Z accelerators pulse shaping capabilities were used to achieve shockless (“quasi-isentropic”) liner compression. Third, we present “micro-B” measurements of azimuthal magnetic field penetration into the initially vacuum-filled interior of a shocked liner. Our measurements and simulations reveal that the penetration commences shortly after the shockwave breaks out from the liners inner surface. The field then accelerates this low-density “precursor” plasma to the axis of symmetry.
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2012
Michael Edward Cuneo; Mark Herrmann; Daniel Brian Sinars; Stephen A. Slutz; W. A. Stygar; Roger Alan Vesey; A. B. Sefkow; Gregory A. Rochau; Gordon Andrew Chandler; J. E. Bailey; John L. Porter; R. D. McBride; D. C. Rovang; M.G. Mazarakis; E. P. Yu; Derek C. Lamppa; Kyle Peterson; C. Nakhleh; Stephanie B. Hansen; A. J. Lopez; M. E. Savage; Christopher A. Jennings; M. R. Martin; R.W. Lemke; Briggs Atherton; I. C. Smith; P. K. Rambo; M. Jones; M.R. Lopez; P. J. Christenson
High current pulsed-power generators efficiently store and deliver magnetic energy to z-pinch targets. We review applications of magnetically driven implosions (MDIs) to inertial confinement fusion. Previous research on MDIs of wire-array z-pinches for radiation-driven indirect-drive target designs is summarized. Indirect-drive designs are compared with new targets that are imploded by direct application of magnetic pressure produced by the pulsed-power current pulse. We describe target design elements such as larger absorbed energy, magnetized and pre-heated fuel, and cryogenic fuel layers that may relax fusion requirements. These elements are embodied in the magnetized liner inertial fusion (MagLIF) concept [Slutz “Pulsed-power-driven cylindrical liner implosions of laser pre-heated fuel magnetized with an axial field,” Phys. Plasmas, 17, 056303 (2010), and Stephen A. Slutz and Roger A. Vesey, “High-Gain Magnetized Inertial Fusion,” Phys. Rev. Lett., 108, 025003 (2012)]. MagLIF is in the class of magneto-inertial fusion targets. In MagLIF, the large drive currents produce an azimuthal magnetic field that compresses cylindrical liners containing pre-heated and axially pre-magnetized fusion fuel. Scientific breakeven may be achievable on the Z facility with this concept. Simulations of MagLIF with deuterium-tritium fuel indicate that the fusion energy yield can exceed the energy invested in heating the fuel at a peak drive current of about 27 MA. Scientific breakeven does not require alpha particle self-heating and is therefore not equivalent to ignition. Capabilities to perform these experiments will be developed on Z starting in 2013. These simulations and predictions must be validated against a series of experiments over the next five years. Near-term experiments are planned at drive currents of 16 MA with D2 fuel. MagLIF increases the efficiency of coupling energy (=target absorbed energy/driver stored energy) to targets by 10-150X relative to indirect-drive targets. MagLIF also increases the absolute energy absorbed by the target by 10-50X relative to indirect-drive targets. These increases could lead to higher fusion gains and yields. Single-shot high yields are of great utility to national security missions. Higher efficiency and higher gains may also translate into more compelling (lower cost and complexity) fusion reactor designs. We will discuss the broad goals of the emerging research on the MagLIF concept and identify some of the challenges. We will also summarize advances in pulsed-power technology and pulsed-power driver architectures that double the efficiency of the driver.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2003
Daniel Brian Sinars; M. E. Cuneo; Guy R. Bennett; David Franklin Wenger; L. E. Ruggles; Mark F. Vargas; John L. Porter; R. G. Adams; Drew Johnson; K. L. Keller; Patrick K. Rambo; Dean C. Rovang; Hans Seamen; Walter W. Simpson; I. C. Smith; S. C. Speas
X-ray backlighting systems are being developed to diagnose z-pinch, inertial confinement fusion capsule, and complex hydrodynamics experiments on the 20 MA Sandia Z machine. The x-ray backlighter source is a laser-produced plasma created using the Z-Beamlet laser, a 2 TW, 2 kJ Nd:glass laser recently constructed at Sandia. As an alternative to point-projection radiography, we are investigating a different geometry [S. A. Pikuz et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 68, 740 (1997)] that uses spherically bent crystal mirrors to simultaneously obtain high spatial resolution and a narrow spectral bandwidth. Backlighting systems using the Si Heα line (1.865 keV) and the Mn Heα line (6.15 keV) are discussed. These systems are capable of spatial resolutions in the 5–10 μm range, a field of view as large as 5 mm by 20 mm, and a spectral bandwidth comparable to the width of the emission line used for backlighting.
Physics of Plasmas | 2012
M. R. Martin; R.W. Lemke; R. D. McBride; Jean-Paul Davis; Daniel H. Dolan; M. D. Knudson; Kyle Robert Cochrane; Daniel Brian Sinars; I. C. Smith; M. E. Savage; W. A. Stygar; K. Killebrew; Dawn G. Flicker; Mark Herrmann
Current pulse shaping techniques, originally developed for planar dynamic material experiments on the Z-machine [M. K. Matzen et al., Phys. Plasmas 12, 055503 (2005)], are adapted to the design of controlled cylindrical liner implosions. By driving these targets with a current pulse shape that prevents shock formation inside the liner, shock heating is avoided along with the corresponding decrease in electrical conductivity ahead of the magnetic diffusion wave penetrating the liner. This results in an imploding liner with a significant amount of its mass in the solid phase and at multi-megabar pressures. Pressures in the solid region of a shaped pulse driven beryllium liner fielded on the Z-machine are inferred to 5.5 Mbar, while simulations suggest implosion velocities greater than 50kms-1. These solid liner experiments are diagnosed with multi-frame monochromatic x-ray backlighting which is used to infer the material density and pressure. This work has led to a new platform on the Z-machine that can be used to perform off-Hugoniot measurements at higher pressures than are accessible through magnetically driven planar geometries.Current pulse shaping techniques, originally developed for planar dynamic material experiments on the Z-machine [M. K. Matzen et al., Phys. Plasmas 12, 055503 (2005)], are adapted to the design of controlled cylindrical liner implosions. By driving these targets with a current pulse shape that prevents shock formation inside the liner, shock heating is avoided along with the corresponding decrease in electrical conductivity ahead of the magnetic diffusion wave penetrating the liner. This results in an imploding liner with a significant amount of its mass in the solid phase and at multi-megabar pressures. Pressures in the solid region of a shaped pulse driven beryllium liner fielded on the Z-machine are inferred to 5.5 Mbar, while simulations suggest implosion velocities greater than 50kms-1. These solid liner experiments are diagnosed with multi-frame monochromatic x-ray backlighting which is used to infer the material density and pressure. This work has led to a new platform on the Z-machine that can be ...