Designing cylindrical implosion experiments on NIF to study deceleration phase of Rayleigh-Taylor

POSTER

Abstract

The Rayleigh-Taylor (RT) hydrodynamic instability occurs when a lower density fluid pushes on a higher density fluid. This occurs in inertial confinement fusion (ICF) implosions at each of the capsule interfaces during the initial acceleration and the deceleration as it stagnates. The RT instabilities mix capsule material into the fusion fuel degrading the Deuterium-Tritium reactivity and ultimately play a key role in limiting target performance. While significant effort has focused on understanding RT at the outer capsule surface, little work has gone into understanding the inner surface RT instability growth during the deceleration phase. Direct measurements of the RT instability are difficult to make at high convergence in a spherical implosion. Here we present the design of a cylindrical implosion system for the National Ignition Facility for studying deceleration phase RT. We will discuss the experimental design, the estimated instability growth, and our outstanding concerns.

Authors

  • N. Vazirani

    Va. Tech, LANL

  • John Kline

    Los Alamos National Laboratory, LANL, Los Alamos National Lab, Los Alamos Natl Lab

  • E.N. Loomis

    LANL, Los Alamos Natl Lab, Los Alamos National Laboratory

  • Joshua Sauppe

    LANL, Los Alamos Natl Lab

  • Sasi Palaniyappan

    LANL, Los Alamos Natl Lab

  • Kirk Flippo

    LANL, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos Natl Lab

  • Bhuvana Srinivasan

    Virginia Tech, Va. Tech

  • Elad Malka

    NCRN, Nuclear Research Center-Negev, Israel

  • A. Bose

    U. of Mich.

  • D. Shvarts

    NCRN, U. of Mich.