Title :
The test facility for the KSTAR superconducting magnets at SAIT
Author :
Baang, S. ; Baek, S.H. ; Choi, H.J. ; Chung, E.J. ; Chang, Y.B. ; Kim, J.H. ; Kim, J.S. ; Kim, K. ; Kim, M.K. ; Kim, S.B. ; Kim, Y.J. ; Lee, S.I. ; Lee, S.Y. ; Lee, Y.H. ; Park, H. ; Park, K.R. ; Winter, C. ; Yoon, C.S.
Author_Institution :
Energy Lab., Samsung Adv. Inst. of Technol., Taejon, South Korea
fDate :
3/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
SSTF (Samsung Superconductor Test Facility) has been built with the primary goal of testing the KSTAR TF (Toroidal Field) and PF (Poloidal Field) magnets as well as CICC (Cable-in-Conduit Conductor) and superconducting strands in the most relevant manner. The facility is located at SAIT (Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology) near the KSTAR project home site. Two helium liquefiers of 120 liter/hr capacity have been utilized as refrigerators demonstrating simultaneous double mode operation of refrigeration and liquefaction. A forced flow supercritical helium cooling circuit allows the test facility to be operated at temperatures down to 4.5 K. Other major SSTF components are a large vacuum vessel (6 m diameter and 7.3 m height) with liquid nitrogen temperature shield, data acquisition and control system with EPICS (Experimental Physics and Industrial Control System), current leads, and 50 kA modular power supply with fast dump quench protection circuitry. SSTF has been used for the first test-phase of KSTAR CICC sample. The current status of SSTF as the KSTAR magnet test facility for components and qualification test is presented in detail.
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; fusion reactor design; superconducting magnets; test facilities; 4.5 K; KSTAR superconducting magnets; SAIT; Samsung Advanced Institute of Technology; Samsung Superconductor Test Facility; cable-in-conduit conductor; current leads; double mode operation; fast dump quench protection circuitry; forced flow supercritical helium cooling circuit; modular power supply; superconducting strands; test facility; Circuit testing; Conductors; Cooling; Refrigeration; Refrigerators; Superconducting cables; Superconducting magnets; Test facilities; Vacuum systems;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on