Zestaw obrazów 2019
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The team constructing the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) requested their colleagues operating UK’s tokamak JET to expose the machine to extreme loads to find the best materials for ITER’s plasma facing wall.
“There was a slight worry we would see uncontrolled, firework-like splashes of molten metal and that might affect subsequent experiments,” said Dr Gilles Arnoux, one of the scientific coordinators of the experiment. “But it was a smooth melt; the plasma didn’t seem to notice. I was surprised at how little impact it had.”
The tests at JET involved subjecting a small area of a deliberately misaligned tungsten wall tile to regulated bursts of turbulent plasma. During the experiment, the exposed tile was heated up to peak temperatures of 3422° C, to allow the researchers assessing what affect molten tungsten might have on the plasma.
The team’s biggest concern was the melt event could result in contamination of the hydrogen-based plasma with tungsten, which would cause disruption and uncontrolled energy dump of the plasma. Such situation would lead to further melting of the surface, which might become detrimental to the equipment's safety.
However, the molten material moved smoothly to one end of the tile during the experiment, forming a droplet that grew with each additional plasma pulse. Surprisingly, the droplet did not run downwards, but moved away from the hottest part of the plasma instead, due to magnetic forces inside the tokamak.
“It has been a great success and has achieved what it set out to do,” said Dr Richard Pitts, the leader of ITER’s Divertor and Plasma Wall Interactions section, who joined the JET team during the experiment.
“It seems that we can broadly understand what we have seen on the basis of complex computer simulations describing the melt dynamics and thus our confidence is increased in the extrapolations we make for the behaviour to expect on ITER,” he said, adding the results are extremely significant for the ITER team, currently considering the use of tungsten for the construction of ITER.
To achieve fusion inside a tokamak, gas needs to be heated to more than one hundred million ° C, at which temperature it turns into sun-like plasma. Of particular concern to researchers are bursts of turbulence on the edge of the plasma similar to solar flares, which can momentarily inflict heat loads far greater than a blow torch on small areas of the tokamak wall.
The experiments at JET, which is currently the world’s biggest operating tokamak, will continue until mid-2014
Source: E&T
For the first time ever, a Toroidal Field (TF) coil full-size super-conducting prototype of the double pancake (DP) is being manufactured and the first step of the manufacturing process, winding, has been completed at the beginning of August. This milestone, which was carried out at the ASG premises in La Spezia, Italy, follows the production of the winding line.
The ITER device will operate with a system of superconducting magnets which relies on the Toroidal Field coils, the Central Solenoid, the Poloidal Field coils and the Correction coils. F4E is responsible for procuring ten TF coils (Japan will contribute an additional nine TF coils) – “D” shaped coils which will be operated with an electrical current of 68,000 amps, in order to produce the magnetic field which confines and holds the plasma in place in the ITER tokamak. Each TF coil weighs about 300 tons and it is about 16.5 m tall and 9.5 m wide.
Each TF coil contains in total seven double pancakes which produce the magnetic field (two DPs which contain cable-in-conduit conductors measuring 450 m, and five DPs where the conductors measure 750 m in length). Each double pancake is composed of a of conductor length which carries the electrical current, and of a stainless steel D-shaped plate called a radial plate, which holds and mechanically supports the conductor through groves machined on both sides along a spiral trajectory. The conductor is composed of about 1000 superconducting and copper wires cabled inside a 2 mm thick round stainless steel jacket 43.7 mm in diameter.
The winding of the DP, the most challenging component in the TF coil from the manufacturing point of view, consists of bending the conductor length along a D-shaped double spiral trajectory. As it is necessary that the double pancake conductor fits precisely inside the radial plate groove, it is vital to control the trajectory of the conductor in the double pancake and the trajectory of the groove in the radial plate with an extremely high accuracy. In particular, the trajectory of the conductor must be controlled with an accuracy as high as 0.01%, and this is why the winding line utilises a numerically controlled bending unit as well as laser-based technology to measure the position and the dimensions of the conductor. The winding takes place in an environment with a controlled temperature of 20 °C +/-1 C, and at an average speed of 5 m of conductor length per hour.
A consortium composed of Italian company ASG and Spanish companies Iberdrola and Elytt is responsible for the manufacturing of the prototype as well as the future actual double pancakes. With the winding of the prototype now completed, other manufacturing steps are needed: the DP will be heat-treated at 650° C in a specially constructed inert atmosphere oven, then electrically insulated and finally transferred into the grooves of the stainless steel radial plates. After assembly and the application of electrical insulation on the outside of the radial plate, the module is finally impregnated with special radiation resistant epoxy resin thus forming the prototype double pancake module. This work is scheduled to be completed by the beginning of next year and will then allow for the prototype to be tested by being cooled to -77 K in order to assess the effect of the low temperature. It will then be cut in sections in order to analyse the quality of the impregnation of the insulation of the superconducting conductor.
Source: F4E
A key issue for the development of fusion energy to generate electricity is the ability to confine the superhot, charged plasma gas that fuels fusion reactions in magnetic devices called tokamaks. This gas is subject to instabilities that cause it to leak from the magnetic fields and halt fusion reactions.
Now a recently developed imaging technique can help researchers improve their control of instabilities. The new technique, developed by physicists at the U.S. Department of Energy's Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), the University of California-Davis and General Atomics in San Diego, provides new insight into how the instabilities respond to externally applied magnetic fields.
This technique, called Electron Cyclotron Emission Imaging (ECEI) and successfully tested on the DIII-D tokamak at General Atomics, uses an array of detectors to produce a 2D profile of fluctuating electron temperatures within the plasma. Standard methods for diagnosing plasma temperature have long relied on a single line of sight, providing only a 1D profile. Results of the ECEI technique, recently reported in the journal Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion, could enable researchers to better model the response of confined plasma to external magnetic perturbations that are applied to improve plasma stability and fusion performance.
Source: phys.org
Early Saturday morning we fired a Deuterium-Tritium gas-filled Diamond capsule on the NIF. The laser used all 192 beams and delivered 1.24 Megajoules of ultraviolet laser light to the drive Hohlraum at a 350 Terawatts peak power in an ~10 nanosecond pulse.
Excellent data was obtained and for the first time ever we observed a DT neutron yield over 1E15 (early results are coming in at ~1.8E15) or approximately 5,000 Joules of neutron energy.
The yield is about twice the record we have ever produced.
Even better, the Yield over Clean, a measure of the quality of the implosion, was also very impressive and this was done with a relatively low laser energy, low laser power and low implosion velocity! Although much work remains, this bodes well for the first layered diamond experiments planned for September.
It's hard not to feel encouraged by the progress we've made with great new and planned diagnostic capabilities, promising results with diamond and high foot experiments, a team that is working extremely well together, and a go forward plan that, by and large, is well supported by the community.
The FuseNet Association and its almost 40 members, are proud to open the subscription for the first round of awards for the European Fusion Master and Doctorate Certificates.
The certificates can be awarded to students who have done a MSc or PhD in fusion and can demonstrate that they covered the subject with sufficient depth and breadth. The criteria are designed to set a high standard, and as such the 'European Fusion Master and Doctorate' can be regarded as a mark of high quality.
Students with a Certificate have had a multi-disciplanary training and not only be well prepared for a career in fusion research, but also for a career outside this field, e.g. in high-tech industry.
The first round of applications is open now to all European students – with a tight deadline: 19 July, 2013.
The first 50 students that apply successfully (MSc and PhD, in order of application) will get an excursion to JET, and receive their Certificate in a festive ceremony at JET on September 26. So, if you finished your fusion studies recently, or know someone else who qualifies: you may apply here.
The academic criteria for the award of the certificate were developed by a broad academic committee under coordination of the European Fusion Education Network FuseNet, with support from the European Commission. They involve different blocks of topics that the students must have studied, as well as requirements on the final thesis.
The accreditation is in the hands of the Academic Council of FuseNet, chaired by Prof. Ambrogio Fasoli. The criteria can be downloaded here, it is easy to check if one complies. After the initial award ceremoeny, there will be two rounds of awards every year from now on. The application form for new certificates therefore remains open throughout the year.
Source: FuseNet
Research projects carried out at the IPPLM are funded by the Polish Ministry of Education and Science, the National Science Centre and by the European Commission within the framework of EUROfusion Consortium under grant agreement No 101052200. Financial support comes also from the International Atomic Energy Agency, European Space Agency and LaserLab Consortium as well as from the Fusion for Energy Agency.