Title :
Design of superconducting coil system for remodeling JT-60
Author :
Ando, T. ; Ishida, S. ; Kato, T. ; Kikuchi, M. ; Kizu, K. ; Matsukawa, M. ; Miura, Y.M. ; Nakajima, H. ; Sakasai, A. ; Tsuchiya, K.
Author_Institution :
JAERI, Ibaraki, Japan
fDate :
3/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
At JAERI a plan of remodeling JT-60 tokamak fusion device by using superconducting coil system is being considered to investigate performance of break-even plasma in long pulse operation. The coil system are composed of Toroidal Field (TF), Central Solenoid (CS) and Equilibrium Field (EF) coils. The TF coil is designed to have a maximum field of 7.4 T at winding with a nominal current of 19.4 kA and a magnetic stored energy of 1.7 GJ which is larger than that of every superconducting coil constructed so far. The coil uses a cable-in-conduit conductor that a Nb3Al (or Nb3Sn) strand cable is inserted into a square stainless steel conduit with a circular hole and is wound with a react-and-wind technique. The design operating temperature is 4.6 K. The CS which consists of 4 modules is operated with a maximum field of 7.4 T and a maximum ramp up rate of 1.0 T/s. For the conductor, a square Nb3Sn cable-in-conduit conductor with stainless steel conduit is used. The EF coil consists of 6 coils that the maximum size coil has an outer diameter of 11 in. The EF4 coil which has a maximum field of 7.4 T and a ramp up rate of 2.2 T/s uses the same conductor as CS and other field coils use a NbTi cable-in-conduit conductor.
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; fusion reactor design; fusion reactor operation; niobium compounds; plasma toroidal confinement; stainless steel; superconducting coils; 1.7 GJ; 19.4 kA; 4.6 K; 7.4 T; JAERI; JT-60; Nb3Al; Nb3Sn; break-even plasma; central solenoid coil; equilibrium field coils; long pulse operation; magnetic stored energy; nominal current; react-and-wind technique; square stainless steel conduit; strand cable; superconducting coil system design; tokamak fusion device; toroidal field coil; Conductors; Niobium; Plasma devices; Solenoids; Steel; Superconducting cables; Superconducting coils; Superconducting magnets; Tin; Tokamaks;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2002.1018452