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Research in Support of the Development of a Plasma Pulse-Resolving, Fuel-Cycle Exhaust-Gas Analyzer for the ITER Divertor

ORAL

Abstract

The ITER Diagnostic Residual Gas Analyzer (DRGA) will measure the distribution of gas species, i.e., H, D, T, and impurities, in the divertor exhaust stream and in the plasma periphery. Recently restarted, final design activities are strongly benefiting from testing of prototypical DRGA components and methods on current fusion devices under international collaboration programs. Advances include recent demonstration of simultaneous H/D/T and 3He/4He absolute concentration measurements on JET with an upgraded, DRGA-like optical gas analyzer and with detection down to 0.1% levels [1]. Experience with this measurement is currently extending to T containing plasmas and has direct implications for operating ICRH in ITER PFPO-2 [2].  A US-ITER developed, prototype quadrupole mass spectrometer, using custom compensation circuitry to extend the cable length by over 10x the state-of-the-art, has also been successfully demonstrated in JET pre-DTE2 plasma operations [3]. The Molfow+ MC simulation code, applied to the divertor DRGA configuration, has confirmed previously estimated response times [4]. Comparison of this simulation to measurements from a prototype ITER DRGA analysis station on W7X, operated in the OP1.2b campaign, revealed a backflow issue for light gas species, which can limit fuel cycle gas isotopic detection limits and whose mitigation is now included in the ongoing final design plan for ITER.

Publication: [1] S. Vartanian et al., Fus. Eng. & Design 170 (2021) 112511; 10.1016/j.fusengdes.2021.112511<br>[2] ITER Technical Report ITR-18-03, pp. 65-66<br>[3] C.C. Klepper et al, "Preliminary demonstration on JET of an ITER neutron environment-compatible quadrupole mass-spectrometer," Fus. Eng. & Design, In-Print, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fusengdes.2021.112672.<br>[4] C.C. Klepper & F.A. Ravelli, "Monte Carlo analysis of the performance of the ITER Diagnostic Residual Gas Analyzer," FST, In Print (TOFE-2020 Special Issue)<br>

Presenters

  • C.Christopher Klepper

    Oak Ridge National Lab

Authors

  • C.Christopher Klepper

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Ephrem Delabie

    Oak Ridge National Lab, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, USA

  • Ionut Jepu

    CCFE JET UK

  • Chris Marcus

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Georg Schlisio

    IPP Greifswald, Germany

  • Stephane Vartanian

    CEA, IRFM, France

  • Kurt G Vetter

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Theodore M Biewer

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Jeffrey H Harris

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Uron Kruezi

    CCFE JET UK, presently ITER IO

  • Fabio A Ravelli

    ORNL, presently CFS