Planning,
scheduling, and efficiency changes designed to enhance NIF’s productivity have
resulted in a continuous increase in the number of experiments NIF was able to
conduct during Fiscal Year 2014, which ended Sept. 30. NIF completed
a weekly average of 6.9 laser shots with targets in the fourth quarter of FY
2014—more than double the rate of 2.8 shots per week in the first quarter of
the year. The quarter ended with a two-week test of complex high-shot-rate
operations, with nine shots conducted each week. For the year, the NIF Team
conducted a total of 191 target experiments against an original planned total
of 150. The shot rate
growth is due largely to the fact that “NIF is spending more time shooting,”
said NIF User Facility Manager Doug Larson. NIF adopted a model used
successfully at the OMEGA Laser Facility at the University of Rochester, where
the facility clearly separates “shot mode” from “maintenance mode.” NIF’s
implementation of this model involved shooting around the clock for five
straight days each week, and then doing 48 hours of maintenance. This allowed
experiments to be conducted on a more continuous basis, with less startup time
and fewer interruptions compared with doing a combination of shots and
maintenance each day. Sean
Bradley, Paul Bonifacio, Eric Downing and Nick St. Hilaire of the NIF Transport
& Handling Team remove the Final Optics Damage Inspection (FODI) instrument
from its position in the NIF Target Bay to protect its camera and electronics
from neutron radiation damage during a high-yield shot. Thanks to new lifting
controls and devices and crew experience, this once complex operation is now
routinely performed in a fraction of the time it once took. Another
change that resulted in more shots was the initiation of a fast-turnaround
operations model based on the Formula One race car pit-crew model, developed by
the NIF Team early this year to improve shot turnaround efficiency and enable a
new scheduling paradigm (seeNIF’s “Formula One”
Model Receives Operational Excellence Award). A third
initiative to boost shot production was the introduction of “mini-campaigns”
designed to minimize facility changes while optimizing data return. In late
June, for example, the NIF Team conducted a zirconium backlighter mini-campaign
by firing four full-system shots in 20 hours—a NIF record. The mini-campaign
“was an opportunity to test new operations and scheduling concepts which will
help us transform the NIF into a user facility that will take full advantage of
its potential,” said NIF&PS Principal Associate Director Jeff Wisoff. Then there
was the introduction of warm (room-temperature) “subscale” NIF targets in July.
The size of both the target capsule and hohlraum are scaled to about 80 percent
the size of an ignition target. These targets, used in tuning experiments,
require less laser energy, have less optics impact, and are faster to field
than their full-scale cryogenic counterparts, providing a more efficient tuning
platform. Ten warm subscale target shots were successfully conducted in a
mini-campaign during the week of Sept. 19.
These
improvements and others were recommended by a Congressionally-mandated 120-day
study to find ways of increasing the NIF shot rate over three years at a
constant annual funding level. A national team of NIF collaborators and
sponsors led by Larson and then-NIF Director Jeff Atherton made organizational,
engineering, scheduling, and experimental configuration recommendations to
enhance NIF’s shot availability. Among the recommendations, which are being
implemented in close collaboration with NIF’s users, were increasing the number
of hours dedicated to shots during shot weeks from about 80 to 120; increasing
the number of shot weeks per year from 38 to 44; and reducing shot cycle time.
By engaging the NIF user community as well as NIF’s sponsors in the effort,
Wisoff said, the study will further the ultimate goal of transforming NIF into
a world-class user facility. A
tritium-filled symmetry capsule (symcap) target assembled and aligned on the
NIF cryogenic target positioner (Cryo TarPos).
The 120-day
study also recommended alternating the use of the cryogenic target positioner
(Cryo TarPos) and target positioner (TarPos) from one shot to the next, a
process that was successfully tested in September and resulted in the
completion of nine shots a week during two successive weeks. When one
positioner is warmed up, the target is installed and prepared for the shot
while the shot cycle is proceeding on the cold target with the other
positioner. The change removed the long target installation and preparation
sequence from the critical path of the shot schedule, reducing the typical
20-hour shot cycle for cryogenic shots to less than 12.5 hours. Allen
Riddle (left), Adam Heal, and Dave Trummer discuss air filters and other
particulars for installing upgraded cryo pumps on the NIF target positioner
(TarPos). The new cryo pumps allow parallel operations on the TarPos and Cryo
TarPos, significantly speeding up cryogenic shots. The first
week was dedicated to inertial confinement fusion (ICF) shots. The shortest
cryogenic shot cycle observed was less than 10 hours. Six 192-beam cryogenic
shots were fired in 75 hours, including a layered deuterium-tritium target.
These were followed by three room-temperature 192-beam ICF shots; the average
shot time was 12 hours and 46 minutes. The shot times included final optics
damage inspections, wavelength changes, and reconfigurations. The second week
was dedicated to the high energy density program; average shot time was 12
hours and 50 minutes.
The two
high-tempo weeks also demonstrated the significant advantage of managing larger
shot time blocks among the participants to achieve an overall efficiency
improvement. Orginial Title: Operational Improvements Boost NIF’s Productivity |
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