Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 48 / Number 3 / November 2005 / Pages 1299-1306
Technical Paper / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST05-A1079
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
The OMEGA cryogenic target handling system provides deuterium-filled cryogenic targets for direct-drive implosion experiments. The targets are 0.9 mm in diameter with a 3-m-thick outer plastic ablator and an inner ice layer that ranges from 80 to 100
m thick. The smoothest ice layer possessed an average root-mean-square (rms) roughness of 1.2
m, although values ranging from 2 to 4
m are more typical. Implosion experiments achieved a maximum yield of 2.11 × 1011 primary neutrons (70% of the clean one-dimensional yield) with an average areal density of 50 mg/cm2 with a 1-ns square, high-adiabat (
= 25) laser pulse. Lower yields (1 × 1010 primary neutrons) and higher areal densities (88 mg/cm2) were obtained using a lower-adiabat (
= 4) laser pulse. Better performance is expected once smoother ice layers (better than 2-
m average rms roughness) are positioned within 10
m of where the laser beams are pointed. Currently, the offset between the target's location and where the laser beams are pointing at the moment of implosion is 14 to 60
m.