The key attributes of Sandia's Z machine are its 18 million amperes of current and a discharge time of less than 100
nanoseconds. This current discharge was initially run through an array of
tungsten wires. In 1999, Sandia tested the idea of nested wire arrays; the second array, out of phase with the first, compensates for
Rayleigh-Taylor instabilities. In 2001, Sandia introduced the Z-Beamlet laser (from surplus equipment of the
National Ignition Facility) as a tool to better image the compressing pellet. This confirmed the shaping uniformity of pellets compressed by the Z machine. In 1999, Sandia started the Z-inertial fusion energy (Z-IFE) project, which aimed to solve the practical difficulties in harnessing fusion power. Major problems included producing energy in a single Z-pinch shot, and quickly reloading the reactor after each shot. By their early estimates, an implosion of a fuel capsule every 10 seconds could economically produce 300 MW of fusion energy. Sandia announced the fusing of small amounts of
deuterium in the Z machine on April 7, 2003. Besides being used as an X-ray generator, the Z machine propelled small plates at 34 kilometers a second, faster than the 30 kilometers per second that Earth travels in its orbit around the
Sun, and four times
Earth's escape velocity (3 times it at sea level). It also successfully created a special, hyperdense "hot ice" known as
ice VII, by quickly compressing water to pressures of 70,000 to 120,000
atmospheres (7 to 12
GPa). Mechanical shock from impacting Z-machine accelerated projectiles is able to melt diamonds. During this period the power of X-ray produced jumped from 10 to 300 TW. In order to target the next milestone of fusion breakeven, another upgrade was then necessary == After refurbishment (2007–) ==