Analysis of staged Z-pinch implosion trajectories from experiments on Zebra

POSTER

Abstract

The Staged Z-pinch plasma confinement concept relies on compressing an annular liner of high-Z plasma onto a target plasma column of deuterium fuel. The interface between the liner and target is stable against the Magneto-Rayleigh-Taylor Instability, which leads to effective fuel compression and makes the concept interesting as a potential fusion reactor. The liner initiates as a neutral gas puff, while the target plasma is a partially ionized (Z$_{eff} <$ 10 percent column ejected from a coaxial plasma gun. The Zebra pulsed power generator (1 MA peak current, 100 ns rise time) provides the discharge that ionizes the liner and drives the Z-pinch implosion. Diverse diagnostics observe the 100-300 km/s implosions including silicon diodes, photo-conducting detectors (PCDs), laser shadowgraphy, an XUV framing camera, and a visible streak camera. The imaging diagnostics track instabilities smaller than 0.1 mm, and Z-pinch diameters below 2.5 mm are seen at peak compression. This poster correlates the data from these diagnostics to elucidate implosion behavior dependencies on liner gas, liner pressure, target pressure, and applied, axial-magnetic field.

Authors

  • M. Ross

    University of California, San Diego, UCSD

  • Fabio Conti

    University of California, San Diego, UCSD

  • T. W. Darling

    University of Nevada, Reno

  • E. Ruskov

    Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technologies, Inc., MIFTI

  • J. Valenzuela

    University of California, San Diego, University of California San Diego, UCSD

  • F. Wessel

    Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technologies, Inc., MIFTI

  • Farhat Beg

    University of California, San Diego, UCSD, Univ. CA, San Diego

  • J. Narkis

    University of California, San Diego, UCSD

  • Hafiz U. Rahman

    Magneto-Inertial Fusion Technologies, Inc., MIFTI