Numéro |
J. Phys. IV France
Volume 133, June 2006
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Page(s) | 721 - 725 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/jp4:2006133146 | |
Publié en ligne | 16 juin 2006 |
J.-C. Gauthier, et al.
J. Phys. IV France 133 (2006) 721-725
DOI: 10.1051/jp4:2006133146
Optimization of experimental designs by incorporating NIF facility impacts
D.C. Eder, P.K. Whitman, A.E. Koniges, R.W. Anderson, P. Wang, B.T. Gunney, T.G. Parham, J.G. Koerner, S.N. Dixit, T.I. Suratwala, B.E. Blue, J.F. Hansen, M.T. Tobin, H.F. Robey, M.L. Spaeth and B.J. MacGowanLLNL, PO Box 808, L-463, Livermore, CA, USA
Abstract
For experimental campaigns on the National Ignition Facility (NIF)
to be successful, they must obtain useful data without causing
unacceptable impact on the facility. Of particular concern is
excessive damage to optics and diagnostic components. There are 192
fused silica main debris shields (MDS) exposed to the potentially
hostile target chamber environment on each shot. Damage in these
optics results either from the interaction of laser light with
contamination and pre-existing imperfections on the optic surface or
from the impact of shrapnel fragments. Mitigation of this second
damage source is possible by identifying shrapnel sources and
shielding optics from them. It was recently demonstrated that the
addition of 1.1-mm thick borosilicate disposable debris shields
(DDS) blocks the majority of debris and shrapnel fragments from
reaching the relatively expensive MDS's. However, DDS's cannot stop
large, fast moving fragments. We have experimentally demonstrated
one shrapnel mitigation technique showing that it is possible to
direct fast moving fragments by changing the source orientation, in
this case a Ta pinhole array. Another mitigation method is to change
the source material to one that produces smaller fragments.
Simulations and validating experiments are necessary to determine
which fragments can penetrate or break 1-3 mm thick DDS's.
Three-dimensional modeling of complex target-diagnostic
configurations is necessary to predict the size, velocity, and
spatial distribution of shrapnel fragments. The tools we are
developing will be used to assure that all NIF experimental
campaigns meet the requirements on allowed level of debris and
shrapnel generation.
© EDP Sciences 2006