Studies of Multi-Electrode Pinch Compression on the FuZE-3 Platform
POSTER
Abstract
To advance the fusion triple product in sheared-flow-stabilized (SFS) Z pinches, the flowing plasma must be compressed significantly beyond densities typically present in the accelerators of Zap Energy fusion research devices. We have designed and commissioned a new experimental platform, FuZE-3, to investigate compression methods leveraging multiple electrodes to inject magnetic flux around the pinch, thereby increasing the pinch current and decreasing pinch radius. The device design and experimental campaign strategies are supported by theoretical and computational modeling efforts ranging from analysis of zero-dimensional analytical models to three-dimensional extended magnetohydrodynamic simulations.
This poster outlines the configuration of the FuZE-3 device, pulsed-power drivers, and diagnostics suite, and presents first results from the platform with analysis of the compression regime and associated scaling of pinch pressure. Collective Thomson scattering measurements demonstrate compression of flowing plasmas by over an order of magnitude in density to over 1024 per cubic meter, with evidence of compressional heating, concurrently with the presence of neutron emission from the compression region. Internal magnetic field measurements are leveraged to evaluate the distribution of the injected current in the device. Average pressures measured in the device are consistent with the presence of a flowing pinch in force balance with the confining magnetic field.
This poster outlines the configuration of the FuZE-3 device, pulsed-power drivers, and diagnostics suite, and presents first results from the platform with analysis of the compression regime and associated scaling of pinch pressure. Collective Thomson scattering measurements demonstrate compression of flowing plasmas by over an order of magnitude in density to over 1024 per cubic meter, with evidence of compressional heating, concurrently with the presence of neutron emission from the compression region. Internal magnetic field measurements are leveraged to evaluate the distribution of the injected current in the device. Average pressures measured in the device are consistent with the presence of a flowing pinch in force balance with the confining magnetic field.
Presenters
-
Colin S Adams
Zap Energy Inc.
Authors
-
Colin S Adams
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Paul C Campbell
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Nischal Kafle
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Benjamin J Levitt
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Eric Todd Meier
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Kyle D Morgan
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Lucas A Morton
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Brian A Nelson
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Morgan Quinley
Zap Energy Inc.
-
A. Stephen S Richardson
Zap Energy Inc., Zap Energy
-
Christine Roark
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Nolan Rossum
Zap Energy Inc., Zap Energy
-
Rachel A Ryan
Zap Energy Inc., Zap Energy
-
Anton D Stepanov
Zap Energy Inc., University of Washington
-
Peter H Stoltz
Zap Energy Inc.
-
Andrew S Taylor
Zap Energy Inc.
-
William C Young
Zap Energy Inc., Zap Energy