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Measuring fusion gain Q > 1 in SPARC

ORAL

Abstract

An early-operations mission of the SPARC tokamak [Creely 2020 JPP] is to achieve a fusion plasma gain Q > 1, a measurement which will be fairly scrutinized. In this talk, we present an approach to make this claim with confidence and transparency. The numerator of Q will be the total fusion power (Pfus) from a majority DT plasma with He3 as a minority species. A suite of neutron diagnostics will make complementary and redundant (primarily DT) fusion neutron measurements. Kinetic profile information (density, temperature, and dilution) will also be used to assess Pfus, with a minimum viable subset of measurements and chords down-selected by exploring a range of physical synthetic profiles. The denominator of Q will be the sum of ohmic power (measured by standard magnetics) and radio frequency (RF) heating less the stored energy’s rate of change (dW/dt). The RF contribution will be the power launched from the antennas, not necessarily absorbed by the plasma, which is both conservative and easier to measure. A relative contribution of |dW/dt| <10% is targeted to define a "quasi-stationary" scenario. Lastly, statistical methods are explored to evaluate confidence in Q > 1 based on these diagnostics’ data and expectations for their random and systematic uncertainties.

Presenters

  • Alex A Tinguely

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center

Authors

  • Alex A Tinguely

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center

  • Matthew L Reinke

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems, CFS

  • Carlos A Paz-Soldan

    Columbia University

  • John L Ball

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Robert S Granetz

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Nathan T Howard

    MIT

  • Shon Mackie

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Enrico Panontin

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Conor J Perks

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • John E Rice

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT

  • Pablo Rodriguez-Fernandez

    MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center

  • Xinyan Wang

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT, MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center

  • Devon J Battaglia

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems

  • Alexander J Creely

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems

  • Russell Gocht

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems, Commonwealth Fusion Systems, Devens MA, USA

  • Ian Holmes

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems

  • Clayton E Myers

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems

  • Prasoon Raj

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems

  • Didier Vezinet

    Commonwealth Fusion Systems

  • Alexandra Lachmann

    Columbia University

  • Nils Leuthold

    Columbia University

  • Ian G Stewart

    Columbia University