DocumentCode :
3775629
Title :
Electron Cyclotron Heating system status and upgrades on DIII-D
Author :
Mirela Cengher;John Lohr;Yuri Gorelov;Ron Prater;Antonio Torrezan;James Anderson;Dan Ponce; Xi Chen;Charles Moeller;Robert Ellis
Author_Institution :
General Atomics, San Diego, California, USA
fYear :
2015
fDate :
5/1/2015 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
5
Abstract :
The Electron Cyclotron Heating (ECH) system on the DIII-D tokamak consists of six 110 GHz gyrotrons with corrugated coaxial 31.75 mm waveguide transmission lines and steerable launching mirrors. The system has been gradually updated, leading to increased experimental flexibility and a high system reliability of 91% in the past year. Operationally, the gyrotrons can generate up to a total of 4.8 MW of rf power for pulses up to 5 seconds in length. The maximum ECH energy injected into the DIII-D is 16.6 MJ. The HE11 mode content is over 85% for all the lines, and the transmission coefficient is better than -1.1 dB for all the transmission lines, close to the theoretical value. A new depressed collector gyrotron was recently installed and was injecting up to 640 kW of power into the plasma during 2014-2015 tokamak operations. Three dual waveguide launchers, which can steer the RF beams ±20 degrees poloidally and toroidally, were used for real-time neoclassical tearing mode control and suppression. The launchers now have increased poloidal scanning speed and beam positioning accuracy of ~±2 mm at the plasma center. A new method of in-situ calibration of the mirror angle was used in conjunction with the upgrading of the encoders and motors for the launchers. Two more gyrotrons are expected to be installed and operational in 2015-2016. The first is a repaired 110 GHz, 1 MW gyrotron that had a gun failure after more than 11 years of operation at DIII-D. The second is a newly designed depressed collector tube in the 1.5 MW class, operating at 117.5 GHz, manufactured by Communications and Power Industries (CPI). It operates in the TE20,9 mode and has achieved 1.8 MW for short pulses during factory testing. This gyrotron is undergoing rework to address a high voltage standoff problem.
Keywords :
"Gyrotrons","Transmission line measurements","Power measurement","Radio frequency","Tokamaks","Power transmission lines"
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Fusion Engineering (SOFE), 2015 IEEE 26th Symposium on
Electronic_ISBN :
2155-9953
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SOFE.2015.7482412
Filename :
7482412
Link To Document :
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