A research program to measure spin polarized fusion reactions in DIII-D
POSTER
Abstract
The use of spin polarized fuel could increase fusion reactivity by a factor of 1.5 and, owing to alpha heating, increase fusion Q in ITER even more. The use of polarized D and 3He in a DIII-D experiment avoids the complexities of handling tritium, while encompassing the same nuclear reaction spin-physics. Polarized fuels can be prepared by permeating optically-pumped 3He into an ICF shell pellet, and by either dynamically polarizing 7Li-D or generating pellets of frozen-spin H-D. The polarization lifetimes in cooled fuel capsules are long (days -to- months for D, days for 3He). Such cryogenically-frozen pellets can be injected vertically by special injectors that minimize depolarizing field gradients. Modeling shows that a readily producible plasma with Ti > 10 keV generates 14.7 MeV proton and 3.6 MeV alpha signals that are sensitive to spin-induced changes in differential cross sections with high accuracy. Additionally, all major reactor-relevant depolarization mechanisms are accessible for study in DIII-D, making it an attractive facility to assess this high impact reactor fueling technique experimentally.
Presenters
-
William W Heidbrink
University of California, Irvine
Authors
-
William W Heidbrink
University of California, Irvine
-
Andrew M J Sandorfi
Jefferson Lab
-
Alvin V Garcia
University of California, Irvine
-
Larry R BAYLOR
ORNL, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
-
Gary L Jackson
General Atomics - San Diego
-
G. W Miller
U. Virginia
-
David C Pace
General Atomics - San Diego
-
Sterling P Smith
General Atomics, General Atomics - San Diego
-
Sina Tafti
U. Virginia
-
Xiangdong Wei
Jefferson Lab
-
Xiaochao Zheng
University of Virginia