Monday, May 9, 2011

Fusion scientists gear up to learn how to harness plasma energy

Fusion scientists gear up to learn how to harness plasma energy

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(PhysOrg.com) -- Researchers working on an advanced experimental fusion machine are readying experiments that will investigate a host of scientific puzzles, including how heat escapes as hot magnetized plasma, and what materials are best for handling intense plasma powers.


Scientists conducting research on the National Spherical Torus Experiment (NSTX) at the U.S. Department of Energy’s PrincetonPhysics Laboratory (PPPL) have mapped out a list of experiments to start in July and run for eight months. The experimental machine is designed to deepen understanding of how plasmas can be mined for energy.

A major topic of investigation by scientists for the coming round of experiments will be the issue of transport– how plasma energy and particles escape the machine. Of particular interest is transport near the plasma edge where the temperature can reach several million degrees Centigrade within a few centimeters. The plasma edge region is very important, since it has a strong influence on the temperature in the even hotter plasma core. The edge is also the region where the plasma must be cooled to lower temperature so it doesn’t damage the walls that confine the experiment.

“We have made a lot of progress already on the machine,” said Jonathan Menard, a principal research physicist and program director for NSTX at the laboratory.“And these experiments will push us further in understanding these mechanisms more fully.”

Menard made the remarks at the close of the four-day NSTX Research Forum, held March 15 to 18 at PPPL, where 55 team members from 17 institutions gathered to focus on experimental research plans and priorities.

Masayuki Ono, a principal research physicist who heads the NSTX department at PPPL, characterized the resulting plan as“highly thoughtful and exciting.”“The planning process,” he added,“is particularly important this year.” He noted that the coming run will represent the research team’s last opportunity to conduct experiments for several years on the device before machine operation is paused to enable a major device upgrade between 2012 and 2014.

Among several other topics, researchers also will focus on the potential of lithium to blanket the hot ionized gas produced in fusion reactions. A major question in magnetic fusion is how to make the plasma and its surrounding walls work well together. For example, if the plasma is too hot when it touches the wall, it can damage it in ways that are difficult to control. One possible solution is to make the wall a liquid, and lithium is special because it liquefies at relatively low temperature, and it does not easily enter hot plasma. Further, lithium has the special property of absorbing particles that hit it so that much less cold gas enters the plasma. As a result, the edge temperature can be increased, turbulence is reduced, and the whole plasma stays hotter–three important characteristics for the creation of fusion energy. Experimenters are actively preparing to cover the floor of the machine with molybdenum tiles that will then be coated with lithium.“We are trying to get more aggressive with this approach of improving the walls that surround the plasma,” Menard said.

Experiments on the NSTX, the largest of the lab’s experiments, began in 1999. The plasmas in NSTX are, like most fusion experiments, confined using magnetic fields and walls designed to withstand the heat from plasmas with temperatures that exceed 100 million degrees Centigrade. Unlike other machines which confine plasmas in a doughnut-like shape, the plasmas in NSTX are spherical in shape with a hole through the center.

PPPL, in Plainsboro, N.J., is devoted both to creating new knowledge about the physics of plasmas– ultrahot, charged gases– and to developing practical solutions for the creation of fusion energy. Through the process of fusion, which is constantly occurring in the sun and other stars, energy is created when the nuclei of two lightweight atoms, such as those of hydrogen, combine in plasma at very high temperatures. When this happens, a burst of energy is released, which could theoretically be used to generate electricity.


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Sunday, May 8, 2011

Simulating tomorrow's accelerators at near the speed of light

Simulating tomorrow's accelerators at near the speed of light

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(PhysOrg.com) -- As conventional accelerators like CERN's Large Hadron Collider grow ever more vast and expensive, the best hope for the high-energy machines of the future may lie in"tabletop"accelerators like BELLA (the Berkeley Lab Laser Accelerator), now being built by the LOASIS program at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab). BELLA, a laser-plasma wakefield accelerator, is remarkably compact. In just one meter a single BELLA stage will accelerate an electron beam to 10 billion electron volts, a fifth the energy achieved by the two-mile long linear accelerator at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.

But realizing the promise of laser-plasma accelerators crucially depends on being able to simulate their operation in three-dimensional detail. Until now such simulations have challenged or exceeded even the capabilities of supercomputers.

A team of researchers led by Jean-Luc Vay of Berkeley Lab’s Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (AFRD) has borrowed a page from Einstein to perfect a revolutionary new method for calculating what happens when a laser pulse plows through a plasma in an accelerator like BELLA. Using their“boosted-frame” method, Vay’s team has achieved full 3-D simulations of a BELLA stage in just a few hours of supercomputer time, calculations that would have been beyond the state of the art just two years ago.

Not only are the recent BELLA calculations tens of thousands of times faster than conventional methods, they overcome problems that plagued previous attempts to achieve the full capacity of the boosted-frame method, such as violent numerical instabilities. Vay and his colleagues, Cameron Geddes of AFRD, Estelle Cormier-Michel of the Tech-X Corporation in Denver, and David Grote of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, publish their latest findings in the March, 2011 issue of the journal Physics of Plasma Letters.

Space, time, and complexity

The boosted-frame method, first proposed by Vay in 2007, exploits Einstein’s Theory of Special Relativity to overcome difficulties posed by the huge range of space and time scales in many accelerator systems. Vast discrepancies of scale are what made simulating these systems too costly.

“Most researchers assumed that since the laws of physics are invariable, the huge complexity of these systems must also be invariable,” says Vay.“But what are the appropriate units of complexity? It turns out to depend on how you make the measurements.”

Laser-plasma wakefield accelerators are particularly challenging: they send a very short laser pulse through a plasma measuring a few centimeters or more, many orders of magnitude longer than the pulse itself (or the even-shorter wavelength of its light). In its wake, like a speedboat on water, the laser pulse creates waves in the plasma. These alternating waves of positively and negatively charged particles set up intense electric fields. Bunches of free electrons, shorter than the laser pulse,“surf” the waves and are accelerated to high energies.

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A simulation of laser-plasma acceleration in the laboratory frame. The wavefronts of laser light are the red and blue disks at right; the fields in the wake are colored from pale blue (accelerating) to orange (decelerating). Electrons accelerated by the first of many buckets in the wake are shown in white at right. Both the laser and the wakefield buckets must be resolved over the entire domain of the plasma, requiring many cells and many time steps. Researchers often use a simulation window that moves with the pulse, but this is not a true transformation of frame and reduces only the multitude of cells, not the multitude of time steps.

“The most common way to model a laser-plasma wakefield accelerator in a computer is by representing the electromagnetic fields as values on a grid, and the plasma as particles that interact with the fields,” explains Geddes, a member of the BELLA science staff who has long worked on laser-plasma acceleration.“Since you have to resolve the finest structures– the laser wavelength, the electron bunch– over the relatively enormous length of the plasma, you need a grid with hundreds of millions of cells.”

The laser period must also be resolved in time, and calculated over millions of time steps. As a result, while much of the important physics of BELLA is three-dimensional, direct 3-D simulation was initially impractical. Just a one-dimensional simulation of BELLA required 5,000 hours of supercomputer processor time at Berkeley Lab’s National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC).

Choosing the right frame

The key to reducing complexity and cost lies in choosing the right point of view, or“reference frame.” When Albert Einstein was 16 years old he imagined riding along in a frame moving with a beam of light– a thought experiment that, 10 years later, led to his Theory of Special Relativity, which establishes that there is no privileged reference frame. Observers moving at different velocities may experience space and time differently and even see things happening in a different order, but calculations from any point of view can recover the same physical result.

Among the consequences are that the speed of light in a vacuum is always the same; compared to a stationary observer’s experience, time moves more slowly while space contracts for an observer traveling near light speed. These different points of view are called Lorentz frames, and changing one for another is called a Lorentz transformation. The“boosted frame” of the laser pulse is the key to enabling calculations of laser-plasma wakefield accelerators that would otherwise be inaccessible.

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A simulation of the same system in the boosted frame of the wake, moving at near lightspeed. Space has contracted, so that the laser wavelengths and the buckets in the wake have similar proportions. Time has stretched, so that first the laser interacts with the plasma, then the buckets are formed one at a time, and finally the electron beam is accelerated. Because of the separation of events in time, the laser has already left the plasma (in yellow rectangle) when the bucket accelerates the beam. Relatively few time steps are needed to model the events, which means less computer time.

A laser pulse pushing through a tenuous plasma moves only a little slower than light through a vacuum. An observer in the stationary laboratory frame sees it as a rapid oscillation of electromagnetic fields moving through a very long plasma, whose simulation requires high resolution and many time steps. But for an observer moving with the pulse, time slows, and the frequency of the oscillations is greatly reduced; meanwhile space contracts, and the plasma becomes much shorter. Thus relatively few time steps are needed to model the interaction between the laser pulse, the plasma waves formed in its wake, and the bunches of electrons riding the wakefield through the plasma. Fewer steps mean less computer time.

Eliminating instability

Early attempts to apply the boosted-frame method to laser-plasma wakefield simulations encountered numerical instabilities that limited how much the calculation frame could be boosted. Calculations could still be speeded up tens or even hundreds of times, but the full promise of the method could not be realized.

Vay’s team showed that using a particular boosted frame, that of the wakefield itself– in which the laser pulse is almost stationary– realizes near-optimal speedup of the calculation. And it fundamentally modifies the appearance of the laser in the plasma. In the laboratory frame the observer sees many oscillations of the electromagnetic field in the laser pulse; in the frame of the wake, the observer sees just a few at a time.

Not only is speedup possible because of the coarser resolution, but at the same time numerical instabilities due to short wavelengths can be suppressed without affecting the laser pulse. Combined with special techniques for interpreting the data between frames, this allows the full potential of the boosted-frame principle to be reached.

“We produced the first full multidimensional simulation of the 10 billion-electron-volt design for BELLA,” says Vay.“We even ran simulations all the way up to a trillion electron volts, which establishes our ability to model the behavior of laser-plasma wakefieldstages at varying energies. With this calculation we achieved the theoretical maximum speedup of the boosted-frame method for such systems– a million times faster than similar calculations in the laboratory frame.”

Simulations will still be challenging, especially those needed to tailor applications of high-energy laser-plasma wakefield accelerators to such uses as free-electron lasers for materials and biological sciences, or for homeland security or other research. But the speedup achieves what might otherwise have been virtually impossible: it puts the essential high-resolution simulations within reach of new supercomputers.


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Saturday, May 7, 2011

Image: Pretty in pink

Pretty in Pink

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(PhysOrg.com) -- Inside the Plasma Spray-Physical Vapor Deposition, or PS-PVD, ceramic powder is introduced into the plasma flame, which vaporizes it and then condenses it to form the ceramic coating.

The PS-PVD rig at NASA's Glenn Research Center uses new technology to create super thin ceramic coatings, which are being developed to protect high efficiency engines. The coatings created in the PS-PVD rig are thinner and more complex than those previously available.

The PS-PVD rig uses a system of vacuum pumps and a blower to remove air from the chamber, reducing the pressure inside to fraction of normal atmospheric pressure. The plasma flame is extremely hot and reaches 10,000 degrees Celsius.is introduced from the torch into the plasma flame. The plasma vaporizes the ceramic powder, which then condenses 5 feet away from the torch onto the component to form the ceramic coating.

Plasma--not a gas, liquid or solid--is the fourth state of matter and often behaves like a gas, except that it conductsand is affected by magnetic fields. On an astronomical scale, plasma is common. The sun is composed of plasma, fire is plasma, fluorescent and neon lights contain plasma.’s PS-PVD rig is one of only two such facilities in the country and one of four in the world.


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Friday, May 6, 2011

NRL scientists focus on light ions for fast ignition of fusion fuels

Scientists at the Naval Research Laboratory Plasma Physics Division demonstrate significant progress in the efficiency and cost effectiveness of light ions in the fast ignition of fusion targets. Light ions such as lithium or carbon are easier to produce technologically and the ion beam properties can be manipulated and tailored best to suit the necessary requirements for fast ignition.

The fast ignition concept has been conceived as an alternative to other approaches forenergy. In the fast ignitor scenario a high-energy particle beam, driven by an ultrashort pulse laser, is deposited into a pre-compressed deuterium-tritium (DT) fuel capsule and creates a 'hot spot' with temperature and density parameters suitable for ignition, approximately 10 kiloelectron volts (keV).

Initially, the easiest path for ignition was taken using electrons, but it was soon recognized that numerous problems such as instabilities exists. The next logical step was to use ions, more specifically, protons. Subsequent experiments demonstrated that protons could be accelerated to relevant energies with conversion efficiencies of 5 to 10 percent and they were proposed as an alternative to relativistic electrons. However, the number of protons required for fast ignition is in order of magnitude two times greater than that of light ions that have aof laser energy into ions of up to 25 percent.

"Presently, all efforts in the direction of fast ignition focus entirely on protons, but this continues to be plagued by problems,"said Dr. Jack Davis."Our research strongly indicates that the use of light ions, heavier than protons, in the lithium to aluminum range is a path in the right direction for ignition."

For ions of the appropriate range, thecan be deposited directly in the fuel, with high efficiency. In general, ion beams offer the advantage of more localized energy deposition, improved beam focusing, straight line trajectory while traversing the DT fuel, maximum energy deposition at the end of their range and suppression of the various kinds of instabilities.

The Ion stopping power— the gradual energy loss of fast particles as they pass through matter— results in a quadratic increase in the required ion kinetic energy relative to atomic number, but a decreasing number of these ions is needed to deliver the fast ignition hot spot energy, translating into a decreased irradiated spot size on the coupling target. The ionization density (number of ions per unit of path length) produced by a fast charged particle along its track increases as the particle slows down. It eventually reaches a maximum called the Bragg peak close to the end of its trajectory. After that, the ionization density dwindles quickly to insignificance.

Other considerations such as tailoring the ion energy and angular distribution, which are responsible for ion beam focusing anddensity deposition in time and space, may turn out to be more important for the practical realization of the fast ignition.


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Thursday, May 5, 2011

Plasma nanoscience needed for green energy revolution

A step change in research relating to plasma nanoscience is needed for the world to overcome the challenge of sufficient energy creation and storage, says a leading scientist from CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering and the University of Sydney, Australia.

Professor Kostya (Ken) Ostrikov of theCentre Australia, CSIRO Materials Science and Engineering, has highlighted, in IOP Publishing'sJournal of Physics D: Applied Physics, the unique potential of plasma nanoscience to control energy and matter at fundamental levels to produce cost-effective, environmentally and human health friendlyfor applications in virtually any area of human activity.

Professor Ostrikov is a pioneer in the field of plasma nanoscience, and was awarded the Australian Future Fellowship (2011) of the Australian Research Council, Walter Boas Medal of the Australian Institute of Physics (2010), Pawsey Medal of the Australian Academy of Sciences (2008), and CEO Science Leader Fellowship and Award of CSIRO (2008) on top of gaining seven other prestigious fellowships and eight honorary and visiting professorships in six different countries.

He said:"We can find the best, most suitable plasmas and processes for virtually any application-specific nanomaterials using plasma nanoscience knowledge.

"The terms 'best' and 'most-suitable' have many dimensions including quality, yield, cost, environment and human friendliness, and most recently,."

Plasma nanoscience involves the use of plasma– an ionised gas at temperatures from just a few to tens of thousands Kelvin– as a tool to create and process very small (nano) materials for use in energy conversion, electronics, IT, health care, and numerous other applications that are critical for a sustainable future.

In particular, Ostrikov points out the ability of plasma to synthesise carbon nanotubes– one of the most exciting materials in modern physics, with extraordinary properties arising from their size, dimension, and structure, capable of revolutionising the way energy is produced, transferred and stored.

Until recently, the unpredictable nature of plasma caused some scientists to question its ability to control energy and matter in order to construct nanomaterials, however Ostrikov draws on existing research to provide evidence that it can be controlled down to fundamental levels leading to cost-effective and environmentally friendly processes.

Compared to existing methods of nanomaterials production, Ostrikov states that plasma can offer a simple, cheaper, faster, and moreefficient way of moving"from controlled complexity to practical simplicity"and has encouraged researchers to grasp the opportunities that present themselves in this field.


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