• DocumentCode
    2845889
  • Title

    The KSTAR tokamak

  • Author

    Choi, D.I. ; Lee, Gil S. ; Jinchoon Kim ; Park, H.K. ; Chang, C.S. ; Choi, Bo H. ; Kim, Kunsu ; Cho, M.H. ; Neilson, G.H. ; Baang, S. ; Bernabei, S. ; Brown, Tyler ; Chang, H.Y. ; Cho, Chang Hyun ; Cho, Sangyeun ; Cho, Y.S. ; Chung, K.H. ; Kie-Hyung Chung

  • Author_Institution
    Korea Basic Sci. Inst., Taejon, South Korea
  • Volume
    1
  • fYear
    1997
  • fDate
    6-10 Oct 1997
  • Firstpage
    215
  • Abstract
    The KSTAR (Korea Superconducting Tokamak Advanced Research) project is the major effort of the Korean National Fusion Program to design, construct, and operate a steady-state-capable superconducting tokamak. The project is led by Korea Basic Science Institute and shared by national laboratories, universities, and industry along with international collaboration. It is in the conceptual design phase and aims for the first plasma by mid 2002. The key design features of KSTAR are: major radius 1.8 m, minor radius 0.5 m, toroidal field 3.5 T, plasma current 2 MA, and flexible plasma shaping (elongation 2.0; triangularity 0.8; double-null poloidal divertor). Both the toroidal and the poloidal field magnets are superconducting coils. The device is configured to be initially capable of 20 s pulse operation and then to be upgraded for operation up to 300 s with non-inductive current drive. The auxiliary heating and current drive system consists of neutral beam, ICRF, lower hybrid, and ECRF. Deuterium operation is planned with a full radiation shielding
  • Keywords
    Tokamak devices; fusion reactor design; plasma beam injection heating; plasma radiofrequency heating; plasma toroidal confinement; superconducting magnets; 3.5 T; ECRF; ICRF; KSTAR; auxiliary heating; conceptual design; current drive; double-null poloidal divertor; elongation; lower hybrid wave heating; major radius; minor radius; neutral beam heating; plasma current; plasma shaping; poloidal field magnets; superconducting coils; tokamak; toroidal field; toroidal field magnets; triangularity; Educational institutions; Heating; International collaboration; Laboratories; Plasma applications; Plasma devices; Steady-state; Superconducting coils; Superconducting magnets; Tokamaks;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Fusion Engineering, 1997. 17th IEEE/NPSS Symposium
  • Conference_Location
    San Diego, CA
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-4226-7
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/FUSION.1997.687023
  • Filename
    687023