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This presentation outlines the requirements and project frame for the ITER Cryogenic System, including the cryoplants, cryodistribution system, and control instrumentation. It also discusses the main duties and technical variants of the system, as well as the schedule and design considerations. The presentation concludes with a discussion on the instrumentation requirements for cryogenics.
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ITER CODAC Colloquium 27th-28th October, 2008 Barcelona, SPAIN ITER Cryogenic System Manel Sanmartí, CIEMAT-F4E Plants DIvision, ITER Department
Outline • ITER cryogenic requirements • ITER CRYO project frame • ITER cryogenic system • Cryo controls and instrumentation • Conclusions
Main duties • Basic: • Cool-down of the cryostat and torus cryopumps • Gradual cool-down and filling of the magnet system and the 80 K thermal shield in about one month • Cool-down of the NB cryopumps, pellet units and gyrotrons • Maintain magnets and cryopumps at nominal temperatures over a wide range of operating modes with pulsed heat loads due to nuclear heating and magnetic field variations • Accommodate periodic regeneration of cryopumps • Accommodate resistive transitions and fast discharges of the magnets and recover from them in few days • Additional • Ensure high flexibility and reliability • Low maintenance
Cryogenic capacity & loads LHe cryoplant: 65 kW equivalent @ 4.5 K Cooling of the superconducting magnet system: 39 kW @ 4.2 K Cooling of HTS current leads: 150 g/s GHe at 50 K Cooling of cryo-pumps with high regeneration frequency: 6.5 kW @ 4.5 K and 70 g/s of LHe liquefaction Small users: 1 kW @ 4.5 K (Gyrotron) LN2 cryoplant: 1300 kW @ 80 K Thermal shielding: up to 800 kW @ 80 K during chamber baking LHe cryoplant pre-cooling: up to 280 kW @ 80 K during normal operation HTS 50 K extra cooling power: up to 180 kW @ 80 K during normal operation Helium inventory: 24 t
Magnets Pulsed Head Load Dynamics: 30W/s Amplitude: 12kW Repetition rate: 1800 sec
Operation scenarios • Uninterrupted operation in order to maximize machine availability • The tokamak will be operated during two 8-hour shifts • The third shift will be used to recover nominal cryogenic conditions, for short interventions and to regenerate the cryopumps up to 470 K • The large dynamic loads prevent full redundancy but allow continuous and uninterrupted operation without plasma • Short maintenance periods of few days every two weeks • Major shutdowns every 16 months • RAMI analysis to improve the design and requirements for spares
Technical variants • Analysis of technical variants compatible with the requirements and basic design principles are presently under study • Simplification of the layout and improvement of performances, reliability and availability or reduction of investment and operation costs • Review and update of heat loads • Large dynamic loads handling • Pulse mitigation by temporary by-pass of the structure load • Use of liquid helium storage buffering and complex process control • Helium management and cold quench tank temperature level • Optimal size, number of cold boxes and parallel operation (flow sharing) • Thermodynamic cycle optimization for the refrigerators • Developments of technology and engineering solutions for key components • Example: SHe circulating pumps and heat exchangers
Outline • ITER cryogenic requirements • ITER CRYO project frame • ITER cryogenic system • Few thoughts on control and instrumentation • Conclusions
The ITER CRYO project frame • Cryoplants system: helium refrigerators, LN2 and 80K loop system, ancillary equipment (warm/cold/liquid tanks, recovery & purification systems) • Cryodistribution system: main distribution boxes with cold circulating pumps and cold compressors, cryolines from cryoplant building and inside tokamak complex • Cryoplant procurement packages are based on functional specs and include manufacturing, delivery, installation & on-site individual sub-package acceptance test
Outline • ITER cryogenic requirements • ITER CRYO project frame • ITER cryogenic system • Few thoughts on control and instrumentation • Conclusions
ITER Cryoplant System Cryodistribution
Cryoplant architecture Pictures courtesy of CERN
Cryoplant layout option 1 80 K He loop Unloading area LN2 plant Instrumentation (control) room Power supply Room for power supply Unloading area Option 1 – LN2 plant and boxes of 80 K helium loop are located at outdoor area
ITER Cryodistribution System Cryodistribution
ITER Cryodistribution system 2 CVBs Cryostat 4 CVBs NB 8 CVBs Torus >50 Cold Boxes, 3 km of cryolines, 4500 components Coming From cryoplant CTCB ACB STR ACB PF ACB TF ACB CS ACB Cryopumps 25000 LHe tank Different levels
Outline • ITER cryogenic requirements • ITER CRYO project frame • ITER cryogenic system • Controls and instrumentation for cryogenics • As personal views this presentation does not necessarily reflect those from other involved parties (IO and IN DA) • Conclusions
Instrumentation requirements • Cryogenic instrumentation (industrial process/plants) • Pressure (1-200b, mbar, vacuum), Temperature (300-3.7K), Flow (warm/cold; 2-2000 g/s), • Gas quality & impurities (N2/H20/CxHy-ppm) • Actuators: Control & Pneumatic Valves, Quench valves (mech/PV), Heaters, Motors (On/Off, speed control) • Switches (safety interlocks) • Cryoplants • Installed redundancy for “inner” instrumentation Cold Boxes • Specific components like turbines (speed sensor, gas impurities) • Cryoditribution • Sub-atmospheric circuits (helium guard) • Speed/Freq. controllers for circulators/cold comp. • High magnetic fields and radiation environment • Accessibility constrains (operation scenarios) • Installed redundancy for “inner” instrumentation ACB
Control requirements • Cryoplants • Modular individual control sub-systems • Commissioning (staged, acceptance) • Operation scenarios • Dedicated PLC for critical components by suppliers: turbines • Cryoditribution • High magnetic fields and radiation environment • Accessibility constrains (operation scenarios) • Dedicated PLC for critical components by suppliers: cold circulators, cold comp. • Master control system • Cryo Integrated control system (IN, IO, EU) • General/individual data/interlocks exchange with other WBS (magnets, TS, cryopumps) • Machine interface (CODAC) • Standardization: hardware and software • Flexibility and “accessibility” during commissioning and first years of operation • Logging and post-mortem system for data/event analysis • Quality control (software updates, modifications) • Cryo and Central control room
Cryoplant control architecture? Data Servers EWS [1..x] Ethernet OWS [1..x]
Cryoplant control architecture? FIELD BUS networks TT, PT, LT, FT, TS, PS, LS, FS CV, PV, EH, EM OWS [1..x] EWS [1..x] Data Servers Ethernet Storage LHe CP1 LHe CP2 LHe CP3 Recup & Purif. 80K Loop 1&2 LHe CB1 LHe CB2 LHe CB3 CTCB LN2_1 LN2_2
Cryodistribution architecture? EWS [1..x] OWS [1..x] Data Servers Ethernet
Cryodistribution architecture? FIELD BUS networks TT, PT, LT, FT, TS, PS, LS, FS CV, PV, EH, EM EWS [1..x] OWS [1..x] Data Servers Ethernet Str. ACB PF ACB TF ACB CS ACB Cryopumps ACB Accessibility constrains High magnetic field High radiation enviroment
Conclusions • Cryogenics is a large industrial plant system • Instrumentation and controls requirements are well understood and identified • Controls architecture not yet defined • RAMI analysis and other projects experience to be used • Integration with clients (magnets, cryopumps, TS, others) • Radiation and high magnetic fields impact on cryodistribution instrumentation and electronics has to be validated • Standardization and integration of all cryogenics sub-systems is mandatory • Hardware (I&C) and software • To be defined before PA by involved parties • Common strategy and standard to be defined by all involved parties (IO, IN DA & F4E) before PA
THANK YOU!! Manel.Sanmarti@f4e.europa.eu