Title :
Intense ion beams for inertial confinement fusion
Author :
Mehlhorn, Thomas A.
Author_Institution :
Sandia Nat. Labs., Albuquerque, NM, USA
fDate :
12/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Intense beams of light and heavy ions are being studied as inertial confinement fusion (ICF) drivers for high yield and energy. Heavy and light ions have common interests in beam transport, targets, and alternative accelerators. Self-pinched transport is being jointly studied. This article reviews the development of intense ion beams for ICF. Light-ion drivers are highlighted because they are compact, modular, efficient and low cost. Issues facing light ions are: (1) decreasing beam divergence; (2) increasing beam brightness; and (3) demonstrating self-pinched transport. Applied-B ion diodes are favored because of efficiency, beam brightness, perceived scalability, achievable focal intensity, and multistage capability. A light-ion concept addressing these issues uses: (1) an injector divergence of ⩽24 mrad at 9 MeV; (2) two-stage acceleration to reduce divergence to ⩽12 mrad at 35 MeV; and (3) self-pinched transport accepting divergences up to 12 mrad. Substantial progress in ion-driven target physics and repetitive ion diode technology is also presented. Z-pinch drivers are being pursued as the shortest pulsed power path to target physics experiments and high-yield fusion. However, light ions remain the pulsed power ICF driver of choice for high-yield fusion energy applications that require driver standoff and repetitive operation
Keywords :
Z pinch; beam handling techniques; fusion reactor operation; ion beams; plasma diodes; plasma inertial confinement; plasma transport processes; plasma-beam interactions; reviews; 35 MeV; 9 MeV; ICF; Z-pinch drivers; achievable focal intensity; applied-B ion diodes; beam divergence; beam transport; driver standoff; heavy ions; high-yield fusion energy applications; increasing beam brightness; inertial confinement fusion; intense ion beams; ion-driven target physics; light ions; light-ion drivers; multistage capability; review; scalability; self-pinched transport; two-stage acceleration; Acceleration; Brightness; Costs; Diodes; Inertial confinement; Ion accelerators; Ion beams; Particle beams; Physics; Scalability;
Journal_Title :
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on