Physics and technology of Inertial Fusion Energy

Europe/Rome
Via Giuseppe Moruzzi 1, 56124, Pisa (Pi), Italy
Descrizione

In the frame of the  Erasmus+ KA2-HED project "LaserFusion: Innovative Education & Training in Laser Inertial Fusion Energy" this 5-day bootcamp will consist in a training course for PhD students with focus on diagnostics for Inertial Fusion Energy experiments. It will include lectures and seminars on theoretical aspects and practical schemes of plasma, particle and radiation diagnostics, as well as hands-on exercise in laboratory.

Follow on line:   https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/3608000401610?p=1zlhpbxVZHqRIyw5wO

 

Find out also the other schools that will be organized in the frame of the  Erasmus+ KA2-HED project "LaserFusion: Innovative Education & Training in Laser Inertial Fusion Energy" by visiting the LaserFusion website

 

 

 

 

 

 

Iscrizione
Registration for the Erasmus+ school "Physics and technology of Inertial Fusion Energy"
Partecipanti
  • Andrea Macchi
  • Brodie Rolph
  • Caterina Mozzo
  • Christos Karvounis
  • David Gregocki
  • Donaldi Mancelli
  • Duncan Barlow
  • Eneko Duñabeitia Madariaga
  • Fernando Brandi
  • Gabriel Alonso
  • Gabriele Cristoforetti
  • GEORGIA ANDRIANAKI
  • Lucy Armitage
  • Maria Goumenaki
  • Olena TURIANSKA
  • Peter Hilz
  • PETRAMARIA KOESTER
  • Simon Vlachos
  • Sofía Rego Pérez
  • +14
    • 16:00 16:30
      Registration and Welcome
    • 16:30 17:30
      Evaluation Test
    • 17:30 18:30
      break: Welcome buffet
    • 08:30 13:30
      Lectures and Seminars
      • 08:30
        Laser Plasma Interaction 1h 30m
        Speaker: Martina Salvadori (CNR)
      • 10:00
        Laser diagnostics 1h 30m
        Speaker: LUCAUMBERTO LABATE (CNR - Istituto Nazionale di Ottica)
      • 11:30
        Break 30m
      • 12:00
        Seminar: Magnetic spectrometer 45m

        The use of a pair of magnets to deflect electrons with respect to their energy will be presented. Different setups from IPPL laboratory as well as from the bibliography will be presented. The use of different detectors for online and accumulative signal acquisition will be discussed (scintillating screens and IPs).

        Speaker: Dr. Georgia Adrianaki
      • 12:45
        Seminar: Shock diagnostics 45m

        The optical and X-ray diagnostics used to study laser-driven shock waves—which generate extreme states of matter—are indispensable for characterizing material properties under high pressure and temperature. The Velocity Interferometer System for Any Reflector (VISAR) [1] is the primary optical tool, providing time-resolved, sub-nanosecond precision measurements of the shock velocity of moving surfaces. By tracking the Doppler shift of laser light reflected from the moving surface, VISAR provides a direct, time-resolved measurement of the shock velocity (Us) and particle velocity (Up), which are critical for determining the material's Equation of State (EOS) [2] via the Rankine-Hugoniot relations. Complementing this, Streaked Optical Pyrometry (SOP) measures the thermal emission of the shock wave emitted on the rear side of the target. Assuming a blackbody radiator model, the shock temperature (Ts) is determined from the blackbody radiation emitted by the shocked material. X-ray Phase-Contrast Imaging (XPCI) [3] is a critically important diagnostic for laser-driven shock experiments on foam targets because it overcomes the limitations of standard X-ray radiography by exploiting the difference in the material's refractive index rather than just absorption. Foams, typically made of low-Z materials with numerous voids, have an intricate cellular structure that creates a high concentration of material-void interfaces, making them nearly invisible to absorption-based methods; XPCI, however, is exceptionally sensitive to these rapid density gradients and interfaces. This capability allows us to precisely visualize the unperturbed structure of the foam, track the propagation of the shock wave through the porous medium, and most critically, directly diagnose the development and growth of hydrodynamic instabilities (like the Richtmyer-Meshkov instability, Kelvin-Helmotz, etc.) seeded by the inherent non-uniformity of the foam's cellular network, which is vital for validating models of mixing and compression in high-energy-density physics. Ref. 1. Antonelli, L., Barbato, F., Mancelli, D., et al., X-ray phase-contrast imaging for laser-induced shock waves. Europhysics Letters (2019), 125(3), 35002 2. Mancelli, D., et al., Shock hugoniot data for water up to 5 Mbar obtained with quartz standard at high-energy laser facilities, Laser and Particle Beams (2021), 4141522 3. Peter M. Celliers, Marius Millot; Imaging velocity interferometer system for any reflector (VISAR) diagnostics for high energy density sciences. Rev. Sci. Instrum. 1 January 2023; 94 (1): 011101

        Speaker: Dr. Donaldi Mancelli
    • 13:30 14:30
      Lunch-Break
    • 14:30 18:30
      Hands-on Session
      • 14:30
        Introduction to hands-on experience 1h
      • 15:30
        Hands-on activity 3h

        Three parallel activities:
        1. Wavefront reconstruction of He-Ne laser, Phase plates: lab measurements + python script
        2. OAP alignment with He-Ne laser + Labtour
        3. Mounting optics: Wavefront changes due to stress on mirrors

    • 08:30 13:30
      Lectures and Seminars
    • 13:30 14:30
      Lunch-Break
    • 14:30 18:30
      Hands-on Session
      • 14:30
        Introduction to hands-on experience 1h
      • 15:30
        Hands-on experience 3h

        Three parallel activities:
        1. Wavefront reconstruction of He-Ne laser, Phase plates: lab measurements + python script
        2. OAP alignment with He-Ne laser + Labtour
        3. Mounting optics: Wavefront changes due to stress on mirrors

    • 08:30 13:30
      Lectures and Seminars
      • 08:30
        X-ray diagnostics 1h 30m
        Speaker: PETRAMARIA KOESTER (CNR-INO)
      • 10:00
        Interferometry 1h 30m
        Speaker: Dr. Fernando Brandi
      • 11:30
        Break 30m
      • 12:00
        Seminar: Monte Carlo Simulations at a Laser Facility: Diagnostics and Beyond 45m

        Monte Carlo techniques use randomness to efficiently solve a broad range of problems across applied mathematics and virtually every branch of science. They are particularly well-suited for tackling high-dimensional problems and for gaining insight into complex stochastic phenomena. In this lecture, we will explore how state-of-the-art Monte Carlo tools can be applied to simulate radiation transport, providing a foundation for developing advanced instrumentation and deepening our understanding of fundamental physical processes in high-power laser facilities. What are the typical use cases of Monte Carlo techniques? How to get started using them? What mistakes to avoid as a beginner?

        Speaker: Dr. Benoit Lefebvre
      • 12:45
        Seminar: Optimization of direct drive irradiation 45m

        To achieve laser driven nuclear fusion, a pellet of hydrogen isotopes is
        imploded in reaction to an expanding plasma, ablated by the laser. The
        implosion is subject to hydrodynamic instabilities, while laser-plasma
        instabilities (LPI) occur in the expanding plasma. These instabilities
        are two of the greatest challenges faced when designing suitable
        implosions for laser fusion experiments. Each instability can be
        evaluated numerically but requires expensive computations that can
        become prohibitive on the timescales required by the implosion. A new
        methodology employs temporally discretised evaluations and simple
        physics based approximations to enable fast and accurate illumination
        design of experiments at existing laser facilities [1].

        Major breakthroughs in laser fusion experiments have led to significant
        public and private funding around the world [2]. Within France, the
        Taranis project led by Genf is aiming to create a laser fusion reactor
        to produce electrical energy. In order to achieve the necessary
        implosion stability, a reactor would require hundreds or thousands of
        laser beams, each with carefully selected parameters. The enormous
        parameter space and the expense of numerical evaluation is a significant
        challenge for design of future facilities.

        This talk presents a new methodology for creating and evaluating the
        drive configuration of beams for future laser facilities. A
        state-of-the-art ray-tracing tool [3] is employed alongside automated
        optimization to create novel illumination geometries while considering
        the impact of the LPI cross-beam energy transfer, beam spot shapes,
        bandwidth and wavelength. This technology is a critical step towards
        fusion energy, furthermore it creates opportunity for designing a
        greater variety of experiments at current facilities, and evaluating LPI
        thought too computationally expensive for prior methods.

        References:
        [1] Barlow, D. et al. “Optimization Methodology of Polar Direct-Drive
        Illumination for the National Ignition Facility” Physical review
        letters 133, (2024) 175101.
        [2] Abu-Shawareb, H., et al. "Lawson criterion for ignition exceeded in
        an inertial fusion experiment." Physical review letters 129.7 (2022):
        075001.
        [3] Colaïtis, A, et al. "Adaptive inverse ray-tracing for accurate and
        efficient modeling of cross beam energy transfer in hydrodynamics
        simulations." Physics of Plasmas 26.7 (2019).

        Speaker: Dr. Duncan Barlow
    • 13:30 14:30
      Lunch-Break
    • 14:30 18:30
      Hands-on Session
      • 14:30
        Introduction to hands.on experience 1h
      • 15:30
        Hands-on experience 3h

        Three parallel activities:
        1. Wavefront reconstruction of He-Ne laser, Phase plates: lab measurements + python script
        2. OAP alignment with He-Ne laser + Labtour
        3. Mounting optics: Wavefront changes due to stress on mirrors

    • 20:00 23:00
      Social Dinner 3h