Assembly of high-areal-density deuterium-tritium fuel from indirectly driven cryogenic implosions

Phys Rev Lett. 2012 May 25;108(21):215005. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.215005. Epub 2012 May 24.

Abstract

The National Ignition Facility has been used to compress deuterium-tritium to an average areal density of ~1.0±0.1 g cm(-2), which is 67% of the ignition requirement. These conditions were obtained using 192 laser beams with total energy of 1-1.6 MJ and peak power up to 420 TW to create a hohlraum drive with a shaped power profile, peaking at a soft x-ray radiation temperature of 275-300 eV. This pulse delivered a series of shocks that compressed a capsule containing cryogenic deuterium-tritium to a radius of 25-35 μm. Neutron images of the implosion were used to estimate a fuel density of 500-800 g cm(-3).