Title of article :
Development of tritium cleanup system for LHD
Author/Authors :
Sakuma، نويسنده , , Yoichi and Kawano، نويسنده , , Takao and Shibuya، نويسنده , , Mamoru and Kabutomori، نويسنده , , Toshiki، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
Energy is vital for humans and we have been consuming a large amount of fossil fuel especially from the beginning of the industrial revolution. Nowadays its huge consumption has however come to threaten our life and we have to prepare nonfossil fuels, for instance solar energy, biomass energy, nuclear energy and so on. Fusion energy is an unlimited resource and one of the strongest candidates of the future energy source. At the National Institute for Fusion Science (referred to as ‘NIFS’ hereafter), we have constructed a new fusion experimental device called large helical device (referred to as ‘LHD’ hereafter) in 1998. The device will generate a small amount of tritium, as a fusion product. In order to remove it from the exhaust gas, we have designed a tritium cleanup system based on a new concept. This system is mainly composed of a palladium permeater, a decomposer and hydrogen absorbing alloys. It may perfectly recover the tritium from exhaust gas without oxidizing it. This system is applicable for the future needs at fusion power plants. In order to remove tritium discharged from fusion experimental facilities, it is usual to employ a system by which tritiated constituents, in various chemical forms, are entirely converted to a form of water vapor by catalytic oxidation. The water vapor containing tritiated form is then absorbed by molecular sieve (referred to as ‘wet system’ hereafter). However, in the case of LHD, it is not rational to deliberately convert the discharged tritium into the water vapor, because the tritium discharged from LHD is almost in a form of hydrogen molecules. Moreover, the tritium in the form of water vapor affects the human body 18 000 times stronger than that of hydrogen molecules. In accordance with these view points, we have developed another type of tritium cleanup system based on a new concept, in which hydrogen molecules including tritiated ones (HT, DT and T2) found in the exhaust gas of LHD are directly fixed to hydrogen absorbing alloys. Other impurities such as methane and water vapor, parts of which are tritiated, will be decomposed into each elemental form by the decomposition process and hydrogen molecules, including tritiated constituents from the decomposition (referred to as ‘dry system’ hereafter).
Keywords :
Hydrogen absorbing alloy , LHD , tritium , Tritium cleanup , Fusion experimental device
Journal title :
Fusion Engineering and Design
Journal title :
Fusion Engineering and Design