DocumentCode :
2761023
Title :
Installation and Operation of New Long Pulse DNB on Alcator C-Mod
Author :
Beals, D.F. ; Granetz, R. ; Cochran, W. ; Byford, W. ; Rowan, W.L. ; Ivanov, A.A. ; Deichuli, P.P. ; Kolmogorov, V.V. ; Shulzhenko, G.
Author_Institution :
Plasma Sci. & Fusion Center, MIT, Cambridge, MA
fYear :
2005
fDate :
Sept. 2005
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
A 50 kV, 7 amp, long-pulse (1.5-3.0 s) diagnostic neutral beam (DNB) built by the Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics in Novosibirsk has been installed on the Alcator C-Mod tokamak. The DNB is used for multiple diagnostics, including motional Stark effect (MSE), charge-exchange recombination spectroscopy (CXRS), and beam emission spectroscopy (BES). Facility required power is 1 MVA and is provided by a 5 kV electrical service. The 1.25 m3 DNB vacuum chamber is pumped using a 500 l/s turbo molecular pump, and two 50,000 l/s liquid helium cryo pumps. Mass flow controllers regulate the hydrogen gas flow to the source anode and cathode. A heated lanthanum hexaboride emitter is used for the arc cathode in order to provide an enhanced lifespan. The beam is extracted from a plasma arc source and accelerated by a set of perimeter-cooled molybdenum grids. Accelerated ions are partially neutralized in a gas cell, and the un-neutralized fraction is diverted by a bending magnet into a water cooled dump. A water cooled, instrumented movable calorimeter provides a target for test and conditioning shots. The neutralized beam is injected through a port duct into the C-Mod tokamak, and has a diameter specification of ~6 cm at the full-width half-maximum (FWHM) at the plasma. Spectroscopic measurements during initial commissioning have shown a full extracted energy fraction (at the source) of ~70% of beam current. Due to the high energy delivery capability of this diagnostic beam there is a risk of overheating the tokamak inner wall. A beam interlock system will incorporate the tokamak pulse state, plasma density, toroidal field, tokamak gas pressure, and an optical pyrometer aimed at the tokamak inner wall
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; arcs (electric); calorimetry; cryopumping; fusion reactor materials; plasma density; plasma diagnostics; plasma sources; plasma-beam interactions; 5 kV; 50 kV; Alcator C-Mod tokamak; DNB vacuum chamber; FWHM; anode source; arc cathode; beam current; beam emission spectroscopy; beam extraction; beam interlock system; bending magnet; cathode source; charge-exchange recombination spectroscopy; full-width half-maximum; gas cell; heated lanthanum hexaboride emitter; hydrogen gas flow; liquid helium cryo pumps; long pulse DNB installation; long pulse DNB operation; long pulse diagnostic neutral beam; mass flow controllers; motional Stark effect; movable calorimeter; neutralized beam injection; optical pyrometer; partially neutralized accelerated ions; perimeter-cooled molybdenum grids; plasma arc source; plasma density; port duct; spectroscopic measurements; tokamak gas pressure; tokamak inner wall; tokamak pulse state; toroidal field; turbo molecular pump; water cooled dump; Acceleration; Cathodes; Helium; Nuclear physics; Particle beams; Plasma measurements; Plasma sources; Spectroscopy; Stark effect; Tokamaks;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Fusion Engineering 2005, Twenty-First IEEE/NPS Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Knoxville, TN
Print_ISBN :
0-4244-0150-X
Electronic_ISBN :
0-4244-0150-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/FUSION.2005.252975
Filename :
4019009
Link To Document :
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