TY - JOUR
T1 - Implications of the tore-supra west-project on radio-frequency additionnal heating systems
AU - Guilhem, Dominique
AU - Argouarch, Arnaud
AU - Bernard, Jean Michel
AU - Bouquey, Francis
AU - Colas, Laurent
AU - Delpech, Lena
AU - Durodie, Frederic
AU - Ekedahl, Annika
AU - Van Helvoirt, Jan
AU - Hillairet, Julien
AU - Joffrin, Emmanuel
AU - Litaudon, Xavier
AU - Magne, Roland
AU - Milanesio, Daniele
AU - Moerel, Jean
AU - Mollard, Patrick
AU - Wittebol, Erik
AU - Achard, Joelle
AU - Armitano, Arthur
AU - Berger-By, Gilles
AU - Charabot, Nicolas
AU - Goniche, Marc
AU - Jacquot, Jonathan
AU - Lombard, Gilles
AU - Prou, Marc
AU - Traisnel-Corbel, Elodie
AU - Volpe, Robert
AU - Vulliez, Karl
PY - 2014/3
Y1 - 2014/3
N2 - This year Tore-Supra celebrated its 25 years of operation. During this long time, a number of technologies have been developed. First of all, it was mandatory to develop reliable superconducting magnets at ∼1.8 K, with superfluid helium as an efficient coolant. For the production of steady state discharge, three types of radio frequency (RF) additional heating systems have been developed: 1) lower hybrid current drive; 2) ion cyclotron resonance heating; and 3) electron cyclotron resonance heating. To cope with long lasting discharges (up to 380 s × 2.8 MW) and large RF additional heating power (12.3 MW × 3 s), actively cooled (AC) plasma facing components were deployed in Tore-Supra for the first time in a tokamak environment. Tore-Supra is now being modified into a D-shape axisymmetric tokamak with AC tungsten main chamber walls and a divertor, the WEST project (W-for tungsten-environment in steady-state tokamak). This new facility has the objective to offer ITER a test bed for validating the relevant AC metallic technologies in D-shape H-mode plasmas. In contrast to other metallic devices, such as JET and ASDEX Upgrade, WEST will rely only on the RF additional power systems. A set of plasma scenarios have been identified, ranging from a high total RF power scenario up to 15 MW in 30 s, to a high fluence scenario of 1000 s with up to 10 MW of injected RF power. These scenarios are able to reproduce ITER relevant conditions of steady state heat loads of 10-20 MW/m2, to test tungsten AC divertor technologies with relevant power heat fluxes and particle fluence.
AB - This year Tore-Supra celebrated its 25 years of operation. During this long time, a number of technologies have been developed. First of all, it was mandatory to develop reliable superconducting magnets at ∼1.8 K, with superfluid helium as an efficient coolant. For the production of steady state discharge, three types of radio frequency (RF) additional heating systems have been developed: 1) lower hybrid current drive; 2) ion cyclotron resonance heating; and 3) electron cyclotron resonance heating. To cope with long lasting discharges (up to 380 s × 2.8 MW) and large RF additional heating power (12.3 MW × 3 s), actively cooled (AC) plasma facing components were deployed in Tore-Supra for the first time in a tokamak environment. Tore-Supra is now being modified into a D-shape axisymmetric tokamak with AC tungsten main chamber walls and a divertor, the WEST project (W-for tungsten-environment in steady-state tokamak). This new facility has the objective to offer ITER a test bed for validating the relevant AC metallic technologies in D-shape H-mode plasmas. In contrast to other metallic devices, such as JET and ASDEX Upgrade, WEST will rely only on the RF additional power systems. A set of plasma scenarios have been identified, ranging from a high total RF power scenario up to 15 MW in 30 s, to a high fluence scenario of 1000 s with up to 10 MW of injected RF power. These scenarios are able to reproduce ITER relevant conditions of steady state heat loads of 10-20 MW/m2, to test tungsten AC divertor technologies with relevant power heat fluxes and particle fluence.
KW - Plasma additional heating systems
KW - Tore-Supra
KW - WEST-project
KW - radio-frequency (RF)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84896490922&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TPS.2013.2290429
DO - 10.1109/TPS.2013.2290429
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84896490922
SN - 0093-3813
VL - 42
SP - 600
EP - 605
JO - IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science
JF - IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science
IS - 3
M1 - 6716017
ER -