This application claims priority to Chinese Patent Application No. 202211357410.2, entitled “Processing method of incident laser, laser system, and laser facility for laser fusion” filed on Nov. 1, 2022, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present application relates to the field of energy sources, and more particularly to a method and system of processing an incident laser for thermonuclear fusion, and laser facility.
In laser-driven inertial confinement fusion (simplified as thermonuclear fusion), a laser is injected into a high-Z (high atomic number) material hohlraum walls through an injection hole and converted into an X-ray, and the X-ray radiates to drive and compress a spherical deuterium tritium target capsule located in the center of the hohlraum to achieve implosion and fusion ignition.
In the thermonuclear fusion, energy of a laser injected into the hohlraum is first absorbed by the hohlraum walls through laser-plasma interaction, and then is converted by a wall plasma into a driving X-ray required for the implosion of the target capsule. Therefore, laser absorption is the first important physical step of energy coupling, which is crucial to energy efficiency and is an essential issue in fusion ignition research. Further, since the hohlraum is non-vacuum, it includes plasmas ablated from the high-Z material walls and a low-Z gas filled in the hohlraum in order to suppress the motion of plasmas in a laser spot region. When the laser injected into the hohlraum passes through those plasmas, laser plasma instability is caused.
During the process of injecting lasers into the hohlraum, part of the injected lasers will scatter out of the hohlraum due to the problems such as the laser plasma instability, which will seriously reduce laser absorption efficiency, thus reducing conversion efficiency of the laser-X ray radiation. On the other hand, it greatly affects uniformity of a radiation drive field which drives ignition target capsules. As the laser plasma instability is more serious, the fraction of the reflected laser is higher, the laser absorption efficiency is lower, and the irradiation uniformity of the target capsules also becomes lower. Therefore, how to suppress the laser plasma instability is a great challenge for thermonuclear fusion ignition.
To this end, on one hand, embodiments of the present application provide a method of processing an incident laser for thermonuclear fusion, and on the other hand, embodiments of the present application provide a system of processing an incident laser for thermonuclear fusion and a laser facility, so as to reduce laser plasma instability and improve laser absorption efficiency.
In the embodiments of the present application, a method of processing an incident laser for thermonuclear fusion includes: receiving an initial incident laser from a laser facility; and performing angular momentum decoherence processing on the initial incident laser, to obtain a target incident laser to be injected into a thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
In an embodiment of the present application, the performing angular momentum decoherence processing on the initial incident laser, to obtain a target incident laser to be injected into a thermonuclear fusion hohlraum includes: for a plurality of first sub-laser beams in the initial incident laser, converting, by using a phase plate, each first sub-laser beam into a second sub-laser beam, the second sub-laser beam having a topological charge different from other second sub-laser beams; and combining second sub-laser beams having different topological charges into a light spring, the light spring being as the target incident laser to be injected into the thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
In an embodiment of the present application, the second sub-laser beams having different topological charges are sub-laser beams having an equidistant distribution of topological charges.
In an embodiment of the present application, the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams having a same frequency and a same relative phase; and the target incident laser is a narrow-band and long-pitch light spring containing one strong spot of which a location is not time-varying.
In an embodiment of the present application, the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having a same relative phase; and the target incident laser is a wide-band and short-pitch light spring containing one strong spot of which a location is time-varying.
In an embodiment of the present application, the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence and spatial decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having a random distribution of relative phases; and the target incident laser is a super light spring containing a plurality of strong spots of which locations are time-varying.
In the embodiments of the present application, a laser facility includes: a laser facility module, configured to provide an initial incident laser to be injected into a thermonuclear fusion hohlraum; and an angular momentum decoherence component, configured to perform angular momentum decoherence processing on the initial incident laser, to obtain a target incident laser to be injected into the thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
In an embodiment of the present application, the angular momentum decoherence component includes: a phase plate stand and a plurality of phase plates arranged on the phase plate stand, a phase plate corresponding to a first sub-laser beam of a plurality of first sub-laser beams in the initial incident laser and being configured to convert the first sub-laser beam into a second sub-laser beam, the second sub-laser beam having a topological charge different from other second sub-laser beams, second sub-laser beams having different topological charges being combined into a super light spring, the super light spring being as the target incident laser to be injected into the thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
In the embodiments of the present application, a system of processing an incident laser for thermonuclear fusion includes: a laser facility, configured to provide an initial incident laser to be injected into a thermonuclear fusion hohlraum; and an angular momentum decoherence device, configured to perform angular momentum decoherence processing on the initial incident laser, to obtain a target incident laser to be injected into the thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
In an embodiment of the present application, the angular momentum decoherence device includes: a phase plate stand and a plurality of phase plates arranged on the phase plate stand, a phase plate corresponding to a first sub-laser beam of a plurality of first sub-laser beams in the initial incident laser and being configured to convert the first sub-laser beam into a second sub-laser beam, the second sub-laser beam having a topological charge different from other second sub-laser beams, second sub-laser beams having different topological charges being combined into a super light spring, the super light spring being as the target incident laser to be injected into the thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
As can be seen from the above solution, in the embodiments of the present application, since angular momentum decoherence is performed on the incident laser, the laser plasma instability can be reduced, and the laser absorption efficiency can be improved.
The above and other features and advantages of the present application will become more apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art by describing preferred embodiments of the present application in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
In the embodiments of the present application, it is considered that laser plasma instability caused by the laser stimulated scattering in thermonuclear fusion not only causes the laser scattering out of a hohlraum and affects laser absorption efficiency, but also generates superthermal electrons to pre-heat the target capsules, which seriously influences fusion ignition and thus must be suppressed or even eliminated.
The process of laser stimulated scattering includes stimulated Brillouin scattering, stimulated Raman scattering (SRS), and two-plasmon decay. In the following, taking the SRS as an example, the hazards and influencing factors of laser plasma instability are analyzed.
When a laser propagates in a rarefied plasma, a pondermotive force perturbs an electron density distribution and stimulates an electron plasma wave, and also stimulates corresponding scattered light due to the conservation of energy and the conservation of momentum. This process is called the SRS. The term “stimulated” refers to positive feedback due to the instability of parameters in the scattering process, whereby the scattered light intensity continues to increase under continuous stimulation until saturation. The SRS converts a portion of laser energy into the electron plasma wave that heats the plasma during decay and may generate superthermal electrons. The superthermal electrons pre-heat the interior of fusion target capsules, influence quasi-isentropic compression, and cause ignition failure. At the same time, back SRS causes part of the lasers to be reflected out of the hohlraum, thereby wasting energy. In the full-scale thermonuclear fusion, the focal depth of the laser depth s is very long, that is, the Rayleigh length is very long. The instability process may continue to grow over a long laser propagation distance, thereby causing harm greater.
In a stimulated Raman process, the incident laser, the electron plasma wave, and the SRS light satisfy the conservation of energy and the conservation of momentum, given by:
ωL=ωe+ωS (1)
k
L
=k
e
+k
S (2)
where ωL and kL are the frequency and wave number of the incident laser respectively, ωe and ke are the frequency and wave number of the electron plasma wave respectively, and ωS and kS are the frequency and wave number of the SRS light respectively.
It can be seen from expressions (1) and (2) that only the incident lasers with patterns satisfying matching conditions can resonate with the electron plasma wave and the SRS wave, and can provide greatest contribution to the growth of the laser plasma instability, while the incident lasers with patterns not satisfying the matching conditions make little contribution to the growth rate of the instability. Therefore, by eliminating the coherence of the incident lasers, the amount of lasers satisfying the matching conditions can be reduced, thereby reducing the growth rate of the laser plasma instability.
It can be seen from the matching relationship of expressions (1) and (2) that methods of temporal decoherence and spatial decoherence may be used.
In fact, in addition to the frequency and the wave number, the wave still has an additional parameter, i.e., angular momentum, and the above-described three waves may also satisfy the conservation of angular momentum:
L
L
=L
e
+L
S (3)
where LL, Le, and LS denote the angular momentum of the incident laser, the angular momentum of the electron plasma wave, and the angular momentum of the SRS wave respectively. In an embodiment of the present application, an angular momentum decoherence method may be used for suppressing the laser plasma instability. The physical idea of suppressing laser plasma instability based on reducing or removing angular momentum coherence is explained below.
Take the incident laser being a linear-polarized laser as an example, which may be generalized to the circular-polarized laser. Assuming that the incident laser propagates in a x direction and a Laguerre-Gaussian mode is adopted, the amplitude of the incident laser at position x and time t may be expressed as:
a
L(x,t)=an·e[iω
where an=(−1)p[Cpl/w(x)]·(√{square root over (2r)}/w(x))|/|·e(−r
Here is the case where the incident laser is formed by superposition of N modes. Assume that the nth mode has the frequency the wave number kLn, the topological charge lLn, and the initial phase ϕn (n=1, . . . , N), and then the incident laser may be written as:
For simplicity, let an≡a0, ϕn≡0, and for the frequency, there is ωLn=ω1+ωL0(n−1)ε1, the center frequency ωL0=ω1, the frequency of the first mode is ωL1, the frequency spacing between different modes is ωL0=ω1, and the total frequency bandwidth is Δω=(N−1)ωL0ε1, where ε1 is a constant that determines the frequency bandwidth gap, and Δω/ωL0«1. For the topological charge, there is lLn+l1+lL0(n−1)ε2 the central topological charge is lL0, the topological charge of the first mode is lL1, the topological charge spacing between different modes is lL0ε2, and the total topological charge dispersion is Δl=lL0(N−1)ε2, where ε2 is a constant that determines the topological charge dispersion spacing, and lL0ε2 is a constant. For example, lL0ε2=1.
A light formed by superposition of N modes having the same initial phase and equally spaced topological charges is referred to as a light spring. In embodiments of the present application, a new concept of super light spring is proposed. The decoherence of the super light spring is implemented in all aspects, such as angular momentum, time, and space. The frequency is randomly distributed in a certain range, the initial phase is randomly distributed, and the topological charge is randomly distributed in a certain range. As a result, the laser plasma instability can be suppressed at a very low level.
Based on expression (5), the amplitude of the light spring superimposed by the N modes may be obtained by:
This means that if an incident laser having only one mode and a pulse length T0 is changed to a light spring having N modes, the pulse length of each mode is reduced to be T0/N, and the angular momentum dispersion is reduced to be 2π/N.
For non-relativistic lasers, SRS may be described by the following expressions:
where ωpe is the frequency of the electron plasma wave, αL is the vector potential of the incident laser, ã and ñe are the vector potential of the backscattered laser and the plasma density perturbation respectively, and n0=ωpe2/4πe. The radial gradient is ignored herein, but the scattered wave ˜exP(iωt−ikx+ilφ) is considered. Therefore, for the low-frequency scattered wave, the following expression may be obtained:
where ωl is the frequency of the electron Langmuir wave. It can be seen that the dispersion relationship depends on a radial location. For a vortex light or a light spring, the radius R of the peak amplitude is used herein for estimation. Assuming that only one mode (ωL0, kL0, lL0) resonates, then:
And ω is written into ω=ω1+δω=ωl+iγs, where δω«ωl. In consideration of ε2=0, an expression for the instability growth rate γs may be obtained from expression (9):
In consideration of ε1=0, an expression for the instability growth rate γs may be obtained from expression (9):
where ωs=ωL0−ωl is the frequency of the SRS wave. Herein, in order to calculate the growth rate, it is assumed that Δω/ωL0«1 and Δl/lL0»1.
For the incident laser superimposed by N modes, the peak laser amplitude is Na0. From the above expressions (11-1) and (11-2), it can be seen that there are two incoherent terms for reducing γs, where the term in the expression (11-1) is the frequency bandwidth Δω, and the term in the expression (11-2) is the topological charge dispersion XL It is to be noted that the term Δl is dominant when Δl>(1/lL0)(ωs0/ωL0)(2πR/λL0)2(Δω/ωL0). Since Δω/ωL0«1, the dominance of the term Δl is easily achieved.
In an embodiment of the present application, a three-dimensional particle simulation is performed using an EPOCH program. As an example, in order to reduce the simulation time, l1=3, and N=7. Therefore, an average topological charge is
In order to reduce the simulation time, a00=0.6, and w0=10 μm. The central wavelength of the incident laser is λL0=800 nm (the corresponding central frequency is ωL0=3.75×1014HZ) Therefore, the power of the light spring is P=0.16TW. If the frequency spacing is ωL0ε1=0.03ωL0, the total frequency width is (N−1)ωL0ε1=0.18ωL0. Therefore, the pitch of the light spring is Δx=2πc/(ωL0ε1)≈27 μm. The laser amplitude is configured to be invariant with time, and the pulse width is 93.3 fs. The electron density is ne=1.7×1020 cm−3 (about 0.15 times of the critical density). The dimensions of a simulation module moving with time are: 60 μm (χ)×80 μm (γ)×80 μm (Z), corresponding to 600×800×800 simulation units. One particle is guaranteed in each simulation unit. A spatial region in which the plasma is located is: 15 μm<X<800 μm, −75 μm<y<75 μm, and −75 μm<Z<75 μm.
The case where the light spring has propagated 240 μm will be described below.
In order to clearly view the influence of the topological dispersion of the light spring (lL0ϵ2≠0) and the energy spectrum width of the Laguerre-Gaussian light (lL0ε2=0) on the SRS growth process, an evolution behavior of an SRS scattering fraction with space in difference cases is further shown in
The following is to verify whether the superposition of the laser sub-beams causes strong laser spots in space and time, and thus generates superthermal electrons, so as to preheat the target capsules, resulting in ignition failure. For both cases of
In a thermonuclear fusion device, a laser bundle is formed by superposition of a plurality of sub-laser beams. Different topological charges may be applied to the sub-laser beams, so that a plurality of Laguerre-Gaussian photon beams may be combined into a light spring bundle. Further, due to the existence of the angular momentum dispersion, the SRS can be suppressed more effectively by using the super light spring having the random phase and the random angular momentum, as shown in
In order that the objects, technical solutions, and advantages of the present application will become more apparent, the technical solutions in the embodiments of the present application will be described hereinafter in detail.
Step 401: Receive an initial incident laser from a laser facility.
In embodiments of the present application, the initial incident laser from the laser facility includes a plurality of sub-laser beams. In practice, the plurality of sub-laser beams may be a plurality of sub-laser beams having the same frequency and the same relative phase, or may be a plurality of sub-laser beams having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and the same relative phase, or may also be a plurality of sub-laser beams having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and a random distribution of relative phases.
Step 402: Perform angular momentum decoherence processing on the initial incident laser, to obtain a target incident laser to be injected into a thermonuclear fusion hohlraum. The thermonuclear fusion hohlraum may be a six-hole sphere cavity or a column cavity.
In this step, as shown in
In an embodiment of the present application, the second sub-laser beams having different topological charges may be sub-laser beams having an equidistant distribution of topological charges.
Accordingly, if the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams having the same frequency and the same relative phase, the target incident laser obtained in this step may be a narrow-band and long-pitch light spring containing one strong spot 501 of which a location is not time-varying, as shown in (a) of
If the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having the same relative phase, the target incident laser obtained in this step may be a wide-band and short-pitch light spring containing one strong spot 502 of which a location is time-varying, as shown in (b) of
If the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence and spatial decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having a random distribution of relative phases, the target incident laser obtained in this step may be a super light spring containing a plurality of strong spots (5031, 5032, 5033) of which locations are time-varying, as shown in (c) of
In embodiments of the present application, the structure of the phase plate may be implemented in various forms.
In embodiments of the present application, the plurality of phase plates may have different structures, or may have similar structures but with different ΔL.
In addition, the present application further provides a laser facility.
The laser facility module 71 is configured to provide an initial incident laser to be injected into a thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
The angular momentum decoherence component 72 is configured to perform angular momentum decoherence processing on the initial incident laser, to obtain a target incident laser to be injected into the thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
In embodiments of the present application, the angular momentum decoherence component 72 may include: a phase plate stand (not shown in
In an embodiment of the present application, when the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams having the same frequency and the same relative phase, the target incident laser is a narrow-band and long-pitch light spring containing one strong spot of which a location is not time-varying. When the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having the same relative phase, the target incident laser is a wide-band and short-pitch light spring containing one strong spot of which a location is time-varying. When the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence and spatial decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having a random distribution of relative phases, the target incident laser is a super light spring containing a plurality of strong spots of which locations are time-varying.
In addition, a system of processing an incident laser for thermonuclear fusion may be further provided in the present application.
The laser facility 81 is configured to provide an initial incident laser to be injected into a thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
The angular momentum decoherence device 82 is configured to perform angular momentum decoherence processing on the initial incident laser, to obtain a target incident laser to be injected into the thermonuclear fusion hohlraum.
In embodiments of the present application, the angular momentum decoherence device 82 may include: a phase plate stand (not shown in
In an embodiment of the present application, when the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams having the same frequency and the same relative phase, the target incident laser is a narrow-band and long-pitch light spring containing one strong spot of which a location is not time-varying. When the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having the same relative phase, the target incident laser is a wide-band and short-pitch light spring containing one strong spot of which a location is time-varying. When the initial incident laser includes the first sub-laser beams after temporal decoherence and spatial decoherence having an equidistant distribution of frequencies and having a random distribution of relative phases, the target incident laser is a super light spring containing a plurality of strong spots of which locations are time-varying.
The foregoing merely illustrates a few embodiments of the present application and is not intended to limit the present application. In practical application, other specific embodiments may be transformed according to the description in the embodiments of the present application, and any modifications, equivalents, improvements, etc. made within the spirit and principles of the present application should be included in the scope of protection of the present application.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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202211357410.2 | Nov 2022 | CN | national |