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High Voltage Discharges and Neutronics in the Centrifugal Mirror Fusion Experiment (CMFX)

POSTER

Abstract

The centrifugal mirror confinement scheme incorporates supersonic rotation of a plasma into a magnetic mirror device. This concept is under experimental investigation in the Centrifugal Mirror Fusion Experiment (CMFX) at the University of Maryland. Plasma E x B rotation is driven by an axial magnetic field and a radial electric field applied through a center electrode with a high voltage pulsed power discharge lasting hundreds of milliseconds. By crowbarring the voltage, we allow the plasma to spin down with a characteristic momentum confinement time, which has been measured in excess of 30 ms. We present results for hydrogen and preliminary results on deuterium discharges with capacitor bank voltages up to 20 kV, and compare that to predictions from MCTrans++, a 0D steady-state scoping tool developed by our group. A diagnostic has been designed with several He-3 detectors calibrated for D-D neutrons. A neutronics code has been developed in OpenMC and is used for comparison to the experimental results. We also discuss upgrades including 50 kV peak discharges.

Presenters

  • Nick R Schwartz

    University of Maryland, College Park

Authors

  • Nick R Schwartz

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Ian G Abel

    IREAP, University of Maryland, College Park

  • Timothy W Koeth

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Brian L Beaudoin

    University of Maryland, College Park, UMD

  • Nathan Eschbach

    University of Maryland, Baltimore County

  • Zachary D Short

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Quan Gan

    University of Maryland, College Park

  • Myles Kelly

    University of Maryland

  • Carlos A Romero-Talamás

    University of Maryland, Baltimore County, UMBC