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A passive mitigation strategy of impurity deposition on the first mirrors using duct with baffles: A case study at a port of KSTAR with in-situ deposition monitoring
  • Kim, Boseong ;
  • Seon, Changrae ;
  • Oh, Soo Ghee ;
  • Kim, Yu Kwon ;
  • An, Younghwa ;
  • Bang, Eunnam ;
  • Hong, Suk Ho ;
  • Pak, Sunil ;
  • Cheon, Munseong ;
  • Lee, Hyun Gon
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Publication Year
2018-04-01
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
Citation
Fusion Engineering and Design, Vol.129, pp.269-276
Keyword
Deposition mitigationDuct with bafflesGas pressurizationMirror deposition
Mesh Keyword
Gas pressurizationGlow discharge cleaningIn-situ depositionMitigation strategyPlasma conditionsPlasma operationsPlasma performanceThickness detection
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Civil and Structural EngineeringNuclear Energy and EngineeringMaterials Science (all)Mechanical Engineering
Abstract
We report our recent investigation on a passive mitigation strategy of the mirror deposition in magnetically confined fusion (MCF) devices, employing a newly designed duct system with baffles at KSTAR tokamak. Our mitigation strategy of the first mirror deposition is to suppress the deposition of impurity species onto the first mirror by confining inert gas such as helium in the duct with baffles located in front of the first mirror. To achieve this final goal, feasibility of this technique at a real tokamak was investigated with regard to the effect on the plasma condition in this paper. To assess the effect of the helium gas flow on the plasma condition, 5 sccm amount of helium gas was injected into the duct for about 70% of shots in the year 2016. This quantity of helium gas was found to be insignificant in terms of the effect on plasma performance. To estimate the deposition quantity on the sample during plasma operation in-situ, quartz crystal microbalances (QCMs) were also installed for thickness detection in real time at KSTAR. The net deposition rates of these samples at KSTAR were about 0.6–40 ng/h cm2 (2.7 × 10−3–0.18 nm/h (graphite)) depending on the kinds of operations such as plasma shots, glow discharge cleaning, and baking of the tokamak first wall. We found that the most detrimental condition with regard to the mirror deposition rate at KSTAR is the glow discharge wall cleaning (GDC) in the baking condition.
ISSN
0920-3796
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/30126
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fusengdes.2018.03.009
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This work was supported by the National R&D Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science & ICT (IF1730, ITER Diagnostics Development and Procurement) and Korea Evaluation Institute of Industrial Technology (KEIT) grant funded by the Korea government (MOTIE) (IF1730, ITER Diagnostics Development and Procurement)
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Kim, Yu Kwon김유권
Department of Chemistry
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