DocumentCode
301005
Title
TFTR tritium accounting system for DT-operation
Author
Nagy, A. ; Alling, P. ; Amerescu, E. ; Bashore, D. ; Blanchard, W. ; Camp, R. ; Corneliussen, M. ; Diesso, M. ; Dong, J. ; Hosea, J. ; LaMarche, P. ; Mika, R. ; Pearson, G. ; Raftopoulos, S. ; Rossmassler, R. ; Saville, C. ; Schobert, J. ; Voorhees, D.
Author_Institution
Plasma Phys. Lab., Princeton Univ., NJ, USA
Volume
1
fYear
1995
fDate
30 Sep-5 Oct 1995
Firstpage
573
Abstract
TFTR has been using tritium as a fuel gas as part of its Deuterium-Tritium (DT) experimental operations with over 600 kCi processed through the site and over 400 kCi injected. Careful inventory and accounting measures are required to ensure site and regulatory safety tritium limits are not exceeded. Tritium management is accomplished through a database system to coordinate experimental needs within these limits. A TFTR Nuclear Materials Custodian (NMC) oversees Tritium Transfer Operations (TTO) using accounts based on specific system physical locations including tritium product containers, uranium beds (hydration), Gas Holding Tanks (GHT), disposable Molecular Sieve Beds (DMSB), the Tritium Gas Injection System (TGIS), and the Tritium Purification System (TPS). Methods used to coordinate and track TTO´s include: single source TTO serial numbers issued by the TFTR Shift Supervisor (TFTRSS) as TTO authorization, TTO verification receipts, and daily NMC database updates with reports issued to appropriate groups. Tokamak tritium operations are controlled and monitored through a computer system that automatically measures and generates tritium injection value reports, as well as providing interlocks between the TGIS and the personnel safety tritium monitors. This system also provides historical trends of tritium values in the entire TGIS, consisting of 14 injector volumes and an interconnecting manifold, to identify inter-system tritium leakage. NMC tritium accounting control involves aspects such as: tritium measurement data flow, verification, instrument calibration, measurement controls, TTO control limits, Material-in-Process (MIP) evaluation, database error detection and correction, and account material balances. Details of these areas are discussed with emphasis on the tight controls required for the very low tritium inventory level permitted for TFTR, and lessons learned from the past 23 months of tritium operations
Keywords
Tokamak devices; computerised control; fusion reactor safety; nuclear engineering computing; tritium; tritium handling; DT-operation; Gas Holding Tanks; Material-in-Process evaluation; T; TFTR; Tritium Gas Injection System; Tritium Purification System; Tritium Transfer Operations; authorization; database error correction; database error detection; disposable Molecular Sieve Beds; instrument calibration; measurement controls; tritium accounting control; tritium accounting system; tritium leakage; verification; Authorization; Automatic generation control; Containers; Database systems; Fluid flow measurement; Fuels; Molecular sieves; Purification; Safety; Tokamaks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Fusion Engineering, 1995. SOFE '95. Seeking a New Energy Era., 16th IEEE/NPSS Symposium
Conference_Location
Champaign, IL
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2969-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FUSION.1995.534288
Filename
534288
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