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Welcome to the ninth HAPL meeting

1,2,5. 7. 3. 9. 6. 8. 4. Welcome to the ninth HAPL meeting. 1. Feb 2001: NRL 2. May 2001: NRL 3. Nov 2001: LLNL 4. Apr 2002: GA 5. Dec 2002: NRL 6. Apr 2003: Sandia 7. Sep 2003: Wisconsin 8. Feb 2004: Georgia Tech 9. Jun 2004: UCLA . Courtesy, Mark Tillack, UCSD.

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Welcome to the ninth HAPL meeting

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  1. 1,2,5 7 3 9 6 8 4 Welcome to the ninthHAPL meeting 1. Feb 2001: NRL 2. May 2001: NRL 3. Nov 2001: LLNL 4. Apr 2002: GA 5. Dec 2002: NRL 6. Apr 2003: Sandia 7. Sep 2003: Wisconsin 8. Feb 2004: Georgia Tech 9. Jun 2004: UCLA Courtesy, Mark Tillack, UCSD

  2. Target Fabrication Target Injection Target Design (+NRL & LLE ) Lasers DPPSL (LLNL) KrF (NRL) Chamber/Materials Final Optics The High Average Power Laser (HAPL) Program:An integrated program to develop the science and technology forLaser Fusion Energy • Government Labs • NRL • LLNL • SNL • LANL • ORNL • PPPL • Universities • UCSD • Wisconsin • Georgia Tech • UCLA • U Rochester, LLE • PPPL • UC Santa Barbara • UNC • DELFT • Industry • General Atomics • Titan/PSD • Schafer Corp • SAIC • Commonwealth Technology • Coherent • Onyx • DEI • Mission Research Corp • Northrup • Ultramet, Inc • Plasma Processes, Inc • Optiswitch Technology • Plasma Processing, Inc 6 Government labs, 9 Universities, 14 Industries

  3. From FPA "Fusion Program Notes"- -FESAC Panel Urges Balanced Inertial Fusion Energy Effort A panel of the Department of Energy's Fusion Energy Sciences Advisory Committee (FESAC), charged with reviewing its Inertial Fusion Energy (IFE)program, has urged the Department to carry out "a coordinated program with some level of research on all the key components (targets, drivers and chambers), always keeping the end product and its explicit requirements in mind."  "In sum the IFE Panel is of the unanimous opinion that the IFE program is technically excellent and that it contributes in ways that are noteworthy to the ongoing missions of the DOE." The full FESAC endorsed the Panel report at it meeting March 29, 2004 and transmitted it to DOE Office of Science Director Ray Orbach.

  4. Yes The HAPL Program Goal is understanding? Thomas Edison Louis Pasteur Audubon Society Neils Bohr No Yes No Goal is an application? The Four Quadrants of Scientific Research adapted from "Pasteur's Quadrant", Donald E. Stokes, Brookings Press, 1997

  5. Basic Science and Technology • Krypton fluoride laser • Diode pumped solid state laser • Target fabrication & injection • Final optics • Chambers materials/design The Path to develop Laser Fusion Energy • Target Design & Physics • 2D/3D simulations • 1-30 kJ laser-target expts Phase I: 1999- 2005 • Develop Full Scale Components • Power plant laser beam line • Target fab/injection facility • Materials evaluations • Power Plant design • Ignition Physics Validation • MJ target implosions • Calibrated 3D simulations Phase II 2006 - 2014 Engineering Test Facility  Full size laser: 2-3 MJ, 60 laser lines  Optimize targets for high yield  Optimize chamber materials and components.   300-700 MW net electricity Phase III Engineering Test Facility operating  2020

  6. "Energy Options for the Future"meeting hosted byThe US Naval Research Laboratory11 & 12 March, 2004Organized by John Sheffield and Steve Obenschain Energy Projections John Sheffield (Senior Fellow, Joint Institute for Energy and Environment, U.T.) Climate Change Technology David Conover (Director, CCTP) Program Coal & Gas Rita Bajura (Director, National Energy Technology Laboratory) Oil David Greene (Lab. Fellow, National Transportation Research Center, ORNL) Energy Efficiency Marilyn Brown (Director, Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy Program, ORNL) Renewables Eldon Boes (Director, Energy Analysis Office, NREL) Nuclear Kathryn McCarthy (Director, Nuclear Science & Engineering, INEEL) Power Industry Perspective David Christian (Senior Vice President, Dominion Resources Inc.) Paths to Fusion Power Stephen Dean (President, Fusion Power Associates)

  7. There are many possible future options for energy...All will require significant R&D to establish viability. FutureGen: 275 MW Clean Coal Prototype Plant: Goal Gasification + CO2 sequestering 350 MW Solar Electric Plant 3.6 MW Wind Turbine http://other.nrl.navy.mil/EnergyOptions/index.html

  8. Basic Science and Technology • Krypton fluoride laser • Diode pumped solid state laser • Target fabrication & injection • Final optics • Chambers materials/design The Path to develop Laser Fusion Energy • Target Design & Physics • 2D/3D simulations • 1-30 kJ laser-target expts Phase I: 1999- 2005 • Develop Full Scale Components • Power plant laser beam line • Target fab/injection facility • Materials evaluations • Power Plant design • Ignition Physics Validation • MJ target implosions • Calibrated 3D simulations Phase II 2006 - 2014 Engineering Test Facility  Full size laser: 2-3 MJ, 60 laser lines  Optimize targets for high yield  Optimize chamber materials and components.   300-700 MW net electricity Phase III Engineering Test Facility operating  2020

  9. Thanks Ralph for all your help!!! HAPL meeting, Georgia Tech, Feb 5 & 6, 2004

  10. Thanks, Steve!!

  11. Why we are doing what we are doing...

  12. Goals for Laser Development KrF Laser (Electra-NRL) DPSSL (Mercury-LLNL) • Develop technologies that can simultaneously meet fusion energy requirements for efficiency (> 6%), wavelength (351 or 248 nm) repetition rate (5-10 Hz), and durability (>100,000,000 shots continuous). • Demonstrate required laser beam quality and pulse shaping • Laser technologies employed must scale to reactor size laser modules and project to have attractive costs for commercial fusion energy.

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