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Extrapolation of GDT Results to a DT Fusion Neutron Source for Fusion Materials Testing e. Tom Simonen, U. Calif., Berkeley 8 th International Conference on Open Magnetic Systems July 5-9, 2010 Novosibirsk, Russia. US Fusion Program (2010). Establish the Scientific Basis
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Extrapolation of GDT Results to a DT Fusion Neutron Source for Fusion Materials Testinge Tom Simonen, U. Calif., Berkeley 8th International Conference on Open Magnetic Systems July 5-9, 2010 Novosibirsk, Russia
US Fusion Program (2010) • Establish the Scientific Basis • Burning Plasma (ITER) • Plasma Control (DIIID, EAST,KSTAR, JT60) • Materials Science • Plasma Material Interactions • Neutron Material Interactions • ………..
US Mirror Assessment • Stimulated by new Gamma-10 and GDT Results • Formed a Mirror Study Group (Virtual Meetings) • 10 Institutions, 25 individuals • Held Two Workshops • Physics and Technology • Held a Magnetic-Mirror Mini-Conference • At 2009 American Phys. Society DPP Meeting • Participated in Numerous DOE Planning Meetings • Proposed International Collaborations • Russia, Japan, China • Tutorial Talk at 2010 APS Meeting • Dmitri Ryutov
ITER is under Construction China, EU, India, Korea, Japan, Russia, US(
FUSION CHALLENGES (Sci.Am., March 2010) “Before fusion can be a viable energy source, scientists must overcome a number of problems. Heat: Materials that face the reactions must withstand extremely high temperatures for years on end. Structure: The high-energy neutrons coming from fusion reactions turn ordinary materials brittle. Fuel: A fusion reactor will have to “breed” its own tritium in a complex series of reactions. Reliability: Laser reactors produce only intermittent blasts; magnet based systems must maintain a plasma for weeks, not seconds.”
Fusion Materials Must Withstand Neutron Bombardment • Three Options toQualify Materials: • Accelerator Based (coupons) • Mirror Based (Blanket Sub-modules} • Tokamak Based (Blanket Modules)
RTNS Accelerator Facility(US Rotating Target Neutron Source)
TDF 1980’s Mirror Based Neutron Source Designs
Axisymmetric Magnetic Mirror Gas Dynamic Trap (GDT) Concept A.A. Ivanov, Fus. Sci. & Tech. 57, (2010), 320
GDT DD-Neutron Axial Profile(Agrees with Computer Simulation)
Electron Temperature vs Time(End Expansion = 100) - H-plasma n ≈ 1.5 x 1013 cm-3 with H-NBI - H-plasma n ≈ 2.5 x 1013 cm-3 with H-NBI - D-plasma n ≈ 2.5÷3 x 1013 cm-3 with H-NBI - H-plasma n ≈ 1.2 x 1013 cm-3 with H-NBI min gas puff - H-plasma n ≈ 3 x 1013 cm-3 with D-NBI - H-plasma n ≈ 3.5÷3 x 1013 cm-3 with H-NBI
Neutron Flux Increases with Te(Now GDT Te = 0.25 keV so Flux = 0.4 MW/m2)(ITER Goal = 0.5 MW/m2, Fluence = 0.3 MW-yrs/m2)
A Russian Neutron Source DesignA MW of Fusion Power for Weeks Neutron Flux ~ 2 MW/m2 Test Area ~ 1 m2I
A DTNS Showing Magnets, Shielding ,Neutral Beams, and Material Samples(Bobouch, Fusion Science & Tech. 41 (2002) p44)
With Today’s GDT ElectronTemperature (0.25 keV) • DTNS Neutron Flux 80% of ITER • DTNS Neutron Fluence in One Year Exceeds that in ITERs Lifetime Note: DTNS does Not Address ITER’s Burning Plasma Physics or Full-scale Blanket Module Testing
Design DTNS from GDT Results • Same Physical Size • L, r • Higher Mag. Field, NBI Energy and Power • 1.2 T, 80 keV, 40 MW • Same Dimensionless Parameters • Beta, B(z), L/ai, r/ai, Te/Ei
A Possible Next StepA Phased Approach (Physics >> PMI >> D-T Neutrons) B = 0.6 Tesla – 1 s NBI 40 keV – 1 MW – 1 s
Key DTNS Scientific Issues • Increase Electron Temperature • Now Te ~ 0.25 keV (0.4 MW/m2 neutrons) • Demonstrate Te > 0.5 keV (80 keV NBI) • Confirm MHD Stabilization Physics • Diagnostics and Simulation • Evaluate DTNS Design • Simultaneous Neutron and PMI Testing?
Key DTNS Technical Issues • High Neutral Beam Power • Large Tritium Recycling • Consider Simple Tandem-Mirror Concept (GDT-SHIP concept) • Small Axisymmetric End-Cells Reduce Plasma End Losses • Reduces overall neutral beam power • Reduces Tritium Recycling
A Tandem-Mirror Neutron Source (TNS) (Based on TMX Data and the GDT-SHIP Concept)
TNS Features • Plug to Center-cell density ratio 4 • To reduce end loss 4-fold • Plug Mirror ratio 3 • To reduce AIC and loss cone size • Plug NB injected at mirror ratio 1.3 • For AIC Stability • Neutral Beam Power (MW) 20 • Half of DTNS
TNS Parameters • Maximum Miagnetic Field, 20 Tesla • Plug Mirror Ratio, 3 • Central-Cell Magnetic Field, 1.2 Tesla • Central-Cell NBI Power, 10 MW • End-Cell NBI Power, 5 MW each • Electron Temperature, 2 keV
TNS Challenges(GDT-SHIP can address many issues) • Electron Temperature • MHD Stability at Higher Te • Energetic Ion iMicro-stability • Tritium Retention • Detailed Modeling Needed • GDT – SHIP can address many issues
Summary • A DT Neutron Source (DTNS) can have the same Physical-Size and the same Dimensionless -Size as GDT • A Simple Tandem Mirror Neutron Source (TNS) Reduces Tritium Reprocessing 4-fold and Reduces the Neutral Beam Power 2-fold.
We Can Produce 1 MW of Fusion Power Sustained for Weeks within 10 Years Purpose: • Test materials & Subcomponents • Demonstrate sustained fusion power Features: • Based on recent GDT Results • Low Tritium Consumption, • No tritium Breeding Required • Simple Construction Geometry.