Title :
Fusion reactor high vacuum pumping: charcoal cryosorber tritium exposure results
Author :
Sedgley, Douglas W. ; Walthers, C.R. ; Jenkins, Everett M.
fDate :
30 Sep-3 Oct 1991
Abstract :
Recent experiments have shown the practicality of using activated carbon (coconut charcoal) at 4 K to pump helium and hydrogen isotopes for a fusion reactor. The long-term effects of tritium on the charcoal/cement system developed by Grumman and LLNL was not known; therefore, a program was undertaken to see what, if any, effect long-term tritium exposure has on the cryosorber. Several charcoal-on-aluminum test samples were subjected to six months exposure of tritium at approximately 77 K. The tritium was scanned several times with a residual gas analyzer and the speed-capacity performance of the samples was measured before, approximately one-third of the way through, and after the exposure. Modest effects were noted which would not seriously restrict the use of charcoal as a cryosorber for fusion reactor high-vacuum pumping applications. Considering that charcoal in a fusion reactor environment will be exposed to higher tritium pressure only during regeneration, it should be possible to design and operate a cryopump system capable of years of operation without tritium degradation effects
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; charcoal; cryopumping; fusion reactor theory and design; low-temperature production; tritium handling; C; T2; coconut charcoal; cryosorber; fusion reactor; high-vacuum pumping applications; regeneration; residual gas analyzer; speed-capacity performance; Fusion reactors; Helium; Hydrogen; Isotopes; Laboratories; Materials science and technology; Reservoirs; Space technology; Testing; Velocity measurement;
Conference_Titel :
Fusion Engineering, 1991. Proceedings., 14th IEEE/NPSS Symposium on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-0132-3
DOI :
10.1109/FUSION.1991.218647