Z-pinch platforms constitute a promising pathway to fusion energy research.
Here, we present a one-dimensional numerical study of the staged Z-pinch (SZP)
concept using the FLASH and MACH2 codes. We discuss the verification of the
codes using two analytical benchmarks that include Z-pinch-relevant physics,
building confidence on the codes' ability to model such experiments. Then,
FLASH is used to simulate two different SZP configurations: a xenon gas-puff
liner (SZP1*) and a silver solid liner (SZP2). The SZP2 results are compared
against previously published MACH2 results, and a new code-to-code comparison
on SZP1* is presented. Using an ideal equation of state and analytical
transport coefficients, FLASH yields a fuel convergence ratio (CR) of
approximately 39 and a mass-averaged fuel ion temperature slightly below 1 keV
for the SZP2 scheme, significantly lower than the full-physics MACH2
prediction. For the new SZP1* configuration, full-physics FLASH simulations
furnish large and inherently unstable CRs (> 300), but achieve fuel ion
temperatures of many keV. While MACH2 also predicts high temperatures, the fuel
stagnates at a smaller CR. The integrated code-to-code comparison reveals how
magnetic insulation, heat conduction, and radiation transport affect platform
performance and the feasibility of the SZP concept