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The Mini-Chamber, an Advanced Protection Concept for NIF

Per F. Peterson, John M. Scott

Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 30 / Number 3P2A / December 1996 / Pages 442-447

National Ignition Facility / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST96-A11962980

Published:February 8, 2018

Inertial confinement fusion (ICF) target debris and ablated near-target materials pose the primary threat to the National Ignition Facility (NIF) final optics debris shields, as well as a major challenge in future inertial fusion energy (IFE) power plants. This work discusses a NIF “mini-chamber,” designed to mitigate the debris threat. Although the NIF base-line design protects against debris using a frost-protected target positioner and refractory first-wall coatings, the mini-chamber provides important flexibility in three areas: debris-shield protection from beyond-design basis shots (i.e. heavy hohlraums, special diagnostics, shields); fielding of large experiments with significant surface ablation; and studying key ablation and gas-dynamics issues for liquid-wall IFE power plants. Key mini-chamber modeling results are presented, followed by discussion of equipment requirements for fielding a NIF mini-chamber.