DocumentCode
1374794
Title
Analysis of the Helium Behavior Due to AC Losses in the KSTAR Superconducting Coils
Author
Park, Y.M. ; Lee, H.J. ; Lee, Y.J. ; Park, S.H. ; Kwag, S.W. ; Song, N.H. ; Chang, Y.B. ; Park, H.T. ; Woo, I.S. ; Bang, E.N. ; Kim, Y.S. ; Yang, H.L. ; Bak, J.S. ; Kwon, M.
Author_Institution
Nat. Fusion Res. Inst., Daejeon, South Korea
Volume
20
Issue
3
fYear
2010
fDate
6/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
530
Lastpage
533
Abstract
The KSTAR superconducting magnetic coils, which are made of cable in-conduit conductor (CICC), maintain a superconducting state with forced-flow supercritical helium (4.5 K, 5.5 bar). During current changing of the superconducting magnetic coils, AC losses are generated in the CICC due to dl/dt, and the heat generated from the loss is removed by high heat capacity supercritical helium. At the same time, reversed flow of the helium occurs due to a rapid increase of the helium temperature and momentary changing of the pressure inside the CICC. This phenomenon has been detected in all of the poloidal field (PF) coils, especially in the upper (U) and lower (L) PF1~PF4 coils. The maximum change of the magnetic field in the PF1UL~PF4UL coils is located near the inlet and outlet of the helium cooling channels, and that of the PF5UL~7UL coils is located at the center of the cooling channel. The temperature variation at the helium inlet was always measured to have a time delay after each shot. In the PF1 coil tests, it was measured to have a delay of 26 sec. During the first plasma campaign, this phenomenon was more severe in the case of all PF coils operating together than for a single PF operation. In this paper, we investigated the thermal-hydraulics of this phenomenon.
Keywords
Tokamak devices; fusion reactor design; fusion reactor theory; helium; superconducting coils; AC losses; KSTAR superconducting magnetic coils; cable in-conduit conductor; helium behavior; helium cooling channels; helium temperature; inverse helium flow; magnetic field change; poloidal field coils; supercritical helium; temperature variation; thermal-hydraulics; CICC; KSTAR; inverse helium flow; superconducting magnet; supercritical helium;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1051-8223
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TASC.2009.2038490
Filename
5371978
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