Impact of ion cyclotron wall conditioning on fuel removal from plasma-facing components at TEXTOR

A. G. Carrasco, S. Möller, P. Petersson, D. Ivanova, A. Kreter, M. Rubel, T. Wauters

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

Abstract

Ion cyclotron wall conditioning (ICWC) is based on low temperature and low density plasmas produced and sustained by ion cyclotron resonance (ICR) pulses in reactive or noble gases. The technique is being developed for ITER. It is tested in tokamaks in the presence of toroidal magnetic field (0.2-3.8 T) and heating power of the order of 105 W. ICWC with hydrogen, deuterium and oxygen-helium mixture was studied in the TEXTOR tokamak. The exposed samples were pre-characterized limiter tiles mounted on specially designed probes. The objectives were to assess the reduction of deuterium content, the uniformity of the reduction and the retention of seeded oxygen. For the last objective oxygen-18 was used as a marker. ICWC in hydrogen caused a drop of deuterium content in the tile by a factor of more than 2: from 4.5 × 1018 to 1.9 × 1018 D cm-2. A decrease of the fuel content by approximately 25% was achieved by the ICWC in oxygen, while no reduction of the fuel content was measured after exposure to discharges in deuterium. These are the first data ever obtained showing quantitatively the local decrease of deuterium in wall components treated by ICWC in a tokamak. The oxygen retention in the tiles exposed to ICWC with oxygen-helium was analyzed for different orientations and radial positions with respect to plasma. An average retention of 1.38 × 1016 18O cm-2 was measured. A maximum of the retention, 4.4 × 1016 18O cm-2, was identified on a sample surface near the plasma edge. The correlation with the gas inlet and antennae location has been studied.

Original languageEnglish
Article number014017
JournalPhysica Scripta
VolumeT159
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014
Event14th International Conference on Plasma-Facing Materials and Components for Fusion Applications, PFMC 2013 - Julich, Germany
Duration: 13 May 201317 May 2013

Keywords

  • TEXTOR
  • fuel removal
  • fuel retention
  • ion cyclotron wall conditioning
  • plasma-facing components

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