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Intense Diagnostic Neutral Beam For Burning Plasmas Challenges for ITER and Opportunities for KSTAR. Jaeyoung Park Glen Wurden and MFE team Los Alamos National Laboratory. US-Korea workshop, Sad Diego, May 19, 2004 Presented at the US ITER Forum, Univ.. of Maryland, May 8, 2003. Why IDNB?.
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Intense Diagnostic Neutral Beam For Burning Plasmas Challenges for ITER and Opportunities for KSTAR Jaeyoung Park Glen Wurden and MFE team Los Alamos National Laboratory US-Korea workshop, Sad Diego, May 19, 2004 Presented at the US ITER Forum, Univ.. of Maryland, May 8, 2003
Why IDNB? • Upcoming burning plasma experiments (ITER or FIRE) • Intense diagnostic neutral beam (IDNB):Critical baseline diagnostics for burning plasma experiments. • CHarge Exchange Recombination Spectroscopy (CHERS): ion temperature profile, impurity and helium ash measurements and fast alpha distribution. • Motional Stark Effect (MSE): current profile (q-profile). • Current technology on diagnostic neutral beam: unlikely to work on burning plasmas due to beam penetration, increased background noise -> low S/N. • Intense (~ 100 A/cm2) pulsed beam: better S/N. • LANL has hardware, history and expertise (since 90s) and personnel for pulsed IDNB source R&D.
Conventional DNB in burning plasmas? How well will it work? • Burning plasmas: higher electron density and larger plasma dimension --> beam penetration problem • Visible background bremsstrahlung: main source of noise and increase with radius and ne2 (while CHERS signal increase with ne) • Increasing beam intensity: very costly in CW beam. • Proposed ITER heating beam: H- based at 500 keV vs. ~125 keV for optimal beam energy for CHERS (need for DNB)
Bremsstrahlung vs. CER signal levels for CW beam- Low S/N ratio especially in the core region From ITER data base: Te ~ 20-30 keV flat Ne ~ 1x1014 cm-3 Beam energy = 125 keV/AMU Beam current of 40 A (CW) Beam area of 20 cm x 20 cm * Full-sized ITER Calculations by Dan Thomas, 1997 Varenna Workshop
Pulsed Ion Diode Neutral Beam (IDNB) Dan Thomas (GA) ran a comparison of CW and Pulsed DNB systems for the original ITER (Varenna 1997 Workshop) • Since energy is fixed, consider increasing current. • Magnetically Insulated Diode (MID) technologies can be used to create intense, pulsed beams at the requisite energy. • S/N improved by : • synchronous gating on detection system. • comparable CER and VB signals require smaller dynamic range from detection system. • Assumptions:CW beam • beam diameter = .2m x .2m • initial beam intensity = 1.0 x 103 A/m2 • Assumptions: pulsed beam • beam diameter = .2m x .2m • initial beam intensity = 1.0 x 106 A/m2 • pulse length = 1 ms • gate time = 2 ms • pulses per second = 30 (300)
Pulsed IDNB yields much larger signals* and could work in the core region * Full-sized ITER Calculations by Dan Thomas, 1997 Varenna Workshop
LANL IDNB Proposal • Technical approach • Intense ion beam source: Magnetically Insulated Diode (MID) • beam extraction over Child-Langmuir (CL) limit (~ 100 times) • Plasma anode: clean beam with long lifetime • Repetitive pulse operation: short pulses (1-2 ms) with high rep-rate (~ 30 Hz) • - improve S/N ratio with low cost. • Optimal beam energy: @ 125 keV/amu for CHERS. Independent from neutral heating beam. • Potential show stoppers • Beam divergence: 1˚ or less divergence required. Not yet proven with MID with plasma anode at high beam extraction. • Lifetime issue: 10,000 shots or more. May not be compatible with high beam extraction (~ 100 times CL limit), high power (~ 4 GW peak power), low beam divergence, etc. • Repetition rate: gas handling and cooling requirement.
B Magnetically insulated diode (MID) basic Electron sheath • Transverse magnetic fields in A-K gap • provide insulation and charge neutralization • Critical magnetic field (B*): required B-field for electron sheath = A-K gap • B* ~ 1.3 kG for 1.5 cm gap @ 250 kV. • If B >>B* or B <<B*: jion limited by space charge • jion ~ 2A/ cm2 for D0 ion. • When B ~ B*: ion current enhancement over CL limit • required current density: > 100A/ cm2 for D0 ion. • enhancement factor of ~ 100 was obtained (by Ueda et al. in 1993) for H0 ion beam. • Beam extraction will be done in the cathode opening Electrons Ions Cathode Anode Plasma
IDNB ITER- relevant parameters Critical issue Critical issue
Opportunities for KSTAR • In relation to ITER • Beam divergence, gas handling and repetition rate, lifetime and reliability - all critical issues for IDNB performance • KSTAR is a logical choice for IDNB demonstration and deployment • Successful operation of IDNB ensures the critical diagnostic capability for ITER • Specific to KSTAR • High S/N ratio and excellent spatial resolution • Diagnostic flexibility (independent of NBI) • Low power consumption (100 kW@ 30 Hz) and small footprint
Project scope and expected schedule • IDNB R&D (2-3 years) - LANL lead • FY 06 funding requested • MID operation and performance optimization • - High beam extraction (~ 100 x CL limit) • - Low beam divergence (5-10 mrad) • - Lifetime (~ 100,000 shots) • - Optimize the repetition rate (10 - 100 Hz) • Design tool for MID system • - 2D fluid + PIC simulation • Deployment and Demonstration (2-3 years) - KSTAR lead • Prototype construction and installation • - Beam neutralization (gas handling and pumping requirement) specific to KSTAR • DNB capability to KSTAR • IDNB performance demonstration for ITER
Proposal Title:Intense Diagnostic Neutral Beam For Burning Plasmas Pulsed Ion Source - Magnetically Insulated Diode • Proposal Objective: • FESAC panel on “A Burning Plasma Program Strategy to Advance Fusion Energy”: 2nd highest priority “ to develop enabling technology that supports the burning plasma research and positions the US to more effectively pursue burning plasma research” • The highest priority for US contributions to the ITER project: “baseline diagnostics, plasma control, remote research tools, etc.” • Intense diagnostic neutral bea (IDNB): Critical baseline diagnostics for CHERS and MSE - ion temperature profile, impurity and helium ash measurements, fast alpha distribution., and q profile. • Intense (~ 50 A/cm2), pulsed beam: better S/N and cost efficient. • LANL has hardware, history & expertise (since 90s) and personnel for pulsed IDNB source R&D. Expected Cost and Schedule: Task 1: 24 month effort headed up by LANL - P24 (outside collaboration on modeling) ~$1.2 M/yr Task 2: 24 month effort headed up by LANL - P24 (collaboration with major fusion facility) ~ $1.2M/yr Total: $4.8M over 48 months Deliverables: Task 1&2: Technical reports on bulleted items and a numerical design tool for IDNB MID. Task 2: Prototype intense diagnostic neutral beam for deployment. Contact Information: • Proposed Technical Approach: • Intense ion beam source: magnetically insulated diode (MID) with anode plasma for clean, intense (~ 50 A/cm2) neutral beam • Repetitive pulse operation: short pulses (1-2 ms) with high rep-rate (~ 30 Hz) to improve S/N ratio with low cost. • Optimal beam energy of 125 keV/amu for CHERS and MSE. • Low beam divergence: 1˚ divergence with modified electrodes and additional electric quadrupole beam shaping. • Task 1: Characterization and optimization of MID • Operation MID facility (CHAMP) at LANL • High beam extraction (50-100 times Child-Langmuir limit) • Modeling of MID (two-fluid and PIC simulation). • Task 2: Deployment of prototype diagnostic beam • Parallel beam extraction with electrode modification. • Efficient neutralization and high rep-rate • Deployment ready at major fusion facility in 4 years Dr. Jaeyoung Park and Dr. Glen Wurden Plasma Physics Group (P-24), MS E-526 Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545 Tel) 505-667-8013, e-mail) jypark@lanl.gov and wurden@lanl.gov