Author:
Cook R.C.,Kozioziemski B.J.,Nikroo A.,Wilkens H.L.,Bhandarkar S.,Forsman A.C.,Haan S.W.,Hoppe M.L.,Huang H.,Mapoles E.,Moody J.D.,Sater J.D.,Seugling R.M.,Stephens R.B.,Takagi M.,Xu H.W.
Abstract
AbstractThe current capsule target design for the first ignition experiments at the NIF Facility beginning in 2009 will be a copper-doped beryllium capsule, roughly 2 mm in diameter with 160-µm walls. The capsule will have a 75-µm layer of solid deuterium-tritium on the inside surface, and the capsule will be powered by X-rays generated from a gold/uranium cocktail hohlraum. The design specifications are extremely rigorous, particularly with respect to interfaces, which must be very smooth to inhibit Rayleigh-Taylor instability growth. This paper outlines the current design, and focuses on the challenges and advances in capsule fabrication and characterization; hohlraum fabrication, and deuterium-tritium layering and characterization.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Condensed Matter Physics,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Cited by
54 articles.
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