Title: Solid DT Studies James K' Hoffer, John D' Sheliak,
1Solid DT Studies James K. Hoffer, John D.
Sheliak, Drew A. Geller
LA-UR-02-7258
- presented at the
- High Average Power Laser Review
- sponsored by
- The Department of Energy Defense Programs
- hosted by the
- Naval Research Laboratory
- Washington DC, December 5-6, 2002
2Target Injection-1 Target Materials Response -
LANL
Overall Objective. Response of target
materials to injection stresses FY 02
Deliverables.. 1. Design of an experiment to
determine the effect of a rapid temperature
transient on a representative DT ice
layer. 2. Design apparatus to measure DT yield
strength and modulus. 3. Measure solid
DT surface spectrum following beta-layering
over a layer of foam. Relevance of
Deliverables X Energy Needed for
injection into hot chamber X
NIF Research on materials in NIF targets
3Progress report deliverable No. 1
The effect of a rapid temperature transient on a
solid DT layer
4A new beta-layering cell has been designed and
fabricated.
- We have added internal thermometry to the design.
- We are modeling this geometry to determine the
amount of heat actually flowing into the solid
DT. - The heater insert has become substantially larger
just to accommodate the thermometer - Lakeshore Cernox bare chip (.75 mm x .4mm x 1
mm long)
5The thermometers were too big to fit!
- We had been informed that the leads were attached
to the long ends of the element. They were, but
in the wrong orientation! - We had the precision shop use a small end-mill to
widen the hole in the heater sleeve. - The thermometer will be potted in epoxy after the
heater winding is added.
6The new camera is ready to follow the action at
speeds up to 250 frames/second. Here we show
the new cell being rotated.
Rapid heating cell shown with front lighting
7We are building a simple heater winding insert
to heat the solid DT layer.
- The shape of the winding influences the shape of
the resulting beta-layer, so it must be highly
symmetric. - Priorities of the LANL HEDP program have
seriously impeded our access to the high
precision machine shop.
- Nevertheless, the mandrels have been machined and
the first heater winding has been wound
8We have added a new colleague to expedite our
experiments. He has begun to carry out a
thermal analysis of the heater cell dynamics.
9Progress report deliverable No. 2
Measurement of the strength of solid DT
10Our plan is to first grow a solid DT specimen
with the aid of beta-layering
11Energen, Inc. has supplied a magnetostrictive
actuator customized to our specifications
0.182
1.767
12The design is essentially complete. A set of
check prints is being prepared
13Power dissipation will not be low, as we first
had been informed
14We are working out the last details of the
strength cell
- Power dissipation of the Energen, Inc. actuator
at steady state will be too high to allow for
adjustment of the gap. - Hence we have designed a stage to permit the
200-m gap between layering posts to be adjusted.
15 Progress report deliverable No. 3
The effect of a foam shell on the surface
roughness of the DT layer
16There are several hypotheses concerning the
effects of an intermediate foam layer on the
inner solid DT layer
- Beneficial effects
- A smoother interior surface
- Because of the fine cell structure of the foam,
freezing should begin with the formation of many
small, randomly-oriented crystallites. These
crystallites should propagate into the pure DT
solid layer, hence there should be no tendency to
form large crystalline facets at the solid-vapor
boundary. - Supercooling of the liquid should not occur
- With millions of nucleation sites presented by
the foam, the liquid will not supercool as is
observed in smooth plastic spheres without a foam
layer. - Detrimental effects
- If irregular, the overall shape of the foam may
affect the shape of the solid DT. - But Im guessing that the gross shape of the foam
will not influence the shape of the solid DT
layer, because the foam is a thermal insulator
and will not disturb the isotherms defined by the
isothermal boundary (i.e., the metallic cell
boundary in my cylindrical experiments or the
layering sphere utilized for spherical targets
at Omega.) - The polymeric foam material may be damaged by
beta activity and decompose. - DT voids in the foam cells may become trapped
- The solid DT is 12.5 denser than liquid. A void
space (full of DT vapor) therefore develops
whenever a cell full of liquid is frozen. (When
symmetrized by beta-layering, the void in a
single spherical shell will extend exactly
half-way across the cell.) Voids first formed in
the foam cells tend to propagate inwards to the
central vapor space. If the inner edge of a foam
cell is blocked by a cell wall (i.e., if the foam
is not completely open-celled), then the void
may get stuck. Stuck voids may not be too
detrimental, because they are sub-micron in size.
But a secondary effect might be a very slow
approach to equilibrium wrt the DT layer
thickness.
17A foam-lined torus will permit clear optical
observations of the DT layer
Empty torusside view(windows not shown)
Filled with foam to yield a 75 micron-thick layer
at the waist, then filled with liquid DT
Filled with DT and beta-layered to yield a solid
layer 100 microns thick.
182 mm tori have been fabricated from pure Pt
19At Sandia, Diana Schroen co-workers added
70-m-thick foam layers to four tori
20The filled tori all have noticeable defects in
the foam layers
Foam Cell B
Foam Cell C
Foam Cell D
Back lighting
Front lighting
21We measured the foam thickness by subtracting
an image of the unfilled Pt torus. We then
chose cell C based on
overall symmetry, average foam layer
thickness, and relative lack of defects at
the toroidal waist
Cell B - average d 125µm
Cell C - average d 66µm
Cell D - average d 47µm
22Following beta-layering, we can show the pure DT
layer by subtracting the empty foam image.
Note that the solid DT ignores the defects in the
foam!!!
empty foam
75 µm DT layer (total)30 µm is pure, while
the rest resides in the foam
Empty foam DT Layer
23The equilibration time is somewhat longer than we
have experienced in foam-free cells
24But the solid DT surface is much smoother than we
have observed in this geometry
25The mode 2 amplitude is responsible for a large
fraction of the total rms roughness. Some of
this is due to the fact that we now cannot line
up the empty torus on axis.
26By plotting a reverse sum of modes, the modal
spectrum can be seen. The presence of the foam
is dramatically reducing the roughness power at
l-modes above 8.
27This compares the best of our previous results
with our best result in foam. Simply put, we
have never seen such a smooth beta-layer!!
28This compares the previous graph with the best of
the LLNL data in spheres, where the solid DT
layer is grown as a single crystal.
29As a function of time, we notice that l-modes 3
to 8 equilibrate in the first 6 hours, followed
by all higher modes (up to 100) during the next
12 hours.
30This disappearance of the mid and higher modes
is precisely what we do not observe when no
intermediate foam layer is present.
31During the course of the first month of
experiments, we noticed that the foam layer
thickness diminished. However, the foam now
appears to be stable.
Foam 100902, avg d 66 µm
Foam 101502, avg d 57 µm
Foam 102302, avg d 51 µm
Foam 102802, avg d 53 µm
Foam 110402, avg d 45 µm
Foam 110102, avg d 47 µm
32It is possible to measure the surface roughness
of DT beta-layered onto a true spherical
surface, using only flat optics