Title :
SLPX-Superconducting long-pulse tokamak experiment
Author :
Jassby, D.L. ; File, J. ; Bronner, G. ; Clarke, J.R. ; Johnson, H.G. ; Martin, G.D. ; Murray, J.G. ; Okabayashi, M. ; Price, W.G., Jr. ; Rogoff, P. ; Singer, C.E. ; Stewart, L.D. ; Bundy, J.J. ; Gralnick, S.L. ; Luzzi, T. ; Marino, J.D. ; Sedgeley, D. ; E
Author_Institution :
Princeton University, Princeton, NJ
fDate :
1/1/1979 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The principal objectives of the SLPX (Superconducting Long-Pulse Experiment) are: (1) to demonstrate quasi-steady operation of 3 to 5 MA hydrogen and deuterium tokamak plasmas at high temperature and high thermal wall loading, and (2) to develop reliable operation of prototypical tokamak reactor magnetics systems featuring a toroidal assembly of high-field niobium-tin coils, and a system of pulsed niobium-titanium superconducting poloidal-field coils. This paper describes the status of the engineering design features of the SLPX, with emphasis on the magnetics systems. The toroidal-field coils have an aperture of 3.1 m × 4.8 m, and can operate with a maximum field at the conductor of 12 T. The superconducting poloidal field magnetics system consists of a pulsed NbTi central solenoid, and a set of d.c. NbTi equilibrium-field coils. The entire machine is enclosed in an outer vacuum container equipped with re-entrant ports that provide ambient access to the room-temperature plasma vessel.
Keywords :
Tokamaks, superconducting magnets; Deuterium; High temperature superconductors; Hydrogen; Magnetics; Niobium compounds; Plasma temperature; Superconducting coils; Thermal loading; Titanium compounds; Tokamaks;
Journal_Title :
Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMAG.1979.1060037