Manufacturing Process and Characterization Overview of a Cylindrical CH ablator with seamlessly embedded thin aluminum band for use in Omega and NIF Experiments.
ORAL
Abstract
LANL has implemented and refined manufacturing techniques to create a cylindrical ablator with a thin internal embedded aluminum band. Current NIF and Omega Cylinder Direct Drive Rayleigh Taylor (CylDRT) campaigns use these techniques. In CylDRT experiments a shock is driven radially through the cylindrical ablator, a thin aluminum band, and finally into a 30mg/cc foam and 5atm of propane that can be easily imaged. The aluminum band is either smooth (constant thickness with round OD and ID), or modal (Round OD with controlled perturbations on the ID). The total wall thickness of the aluminum band is between 10 and 50 microns, and perturbation amplitudes between 4 and 12 micron depending on the specific physics requirements.
This presentation will discuss the multistep machining, coating, leaching, and characterization processes and techniques that have been implemented in order to bring CylDRT and similar campaigns to fruition.
–
Publication: LA-UR-21-26755
Presenters
-
Alex Strickland
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Authors
-
Alex Strickland
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Thomas Day
Los Alamos Natl Lab, Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Derek Schmidt
Los Alamos National Laboratory, LANL
-
Joshua P Sauppe
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Sasi Palaniyappan
Los Alamos Natl Lab, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos National Lab
-
Brian M Patterson
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Tana Morrow
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos Natl Lab
-
Christopher Wilson
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Lynne A Goodwin
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Patrick Donovan
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Randall B Randolph
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos Natl Lab
-
Chris E Hamilton
Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos Natl Lab
-
Stephanie Edwards
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Frank Fierro
Los Alamos National Laboratory
-
Theresa Quintana
Los Alamos National Laboratory