Abstract
Laser inertial confinement fusion (ICF) triggers a nuclear fusion reaction via the evenly compressed capsule containing deuterium tritium fuel with a high-power laser. However, isolated defects on the surface of the capsules reduce the probability of ignition. In this paper, we present a full-surface defects detection method based on a null interferometric microscope (NIM) to achieve high-precision, high-efficiency, and full-surface defects detection on ICF capsules. A dynamic phase-shifting module is applied to the NIM to achieve a single-shot measurement in a single subaperture. With the capsule controlling system, the capsule is rotated and scanned along a planned lattice to get all subapertures measured. The eccentricity error can be measured from wavefront aberrations and compensated online to guarantee the measurement accuracy during the scanning process. After the scanning process, all of the surface defects are identified on the full-surface map. Theories and experimental results indicate that for the capsule with 875-µm-diameter, the lateral resolution could reach 0.7 µm and the measurement time is less than 1 h. The number of sampling points can reach about 50 million. To the best of our knowledge, our proposed system is the first to achieve full-surface defects detection of ICF capsules with such high efficiency and high resolution at the same time.
© 2020 Optical Society of America
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