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Sustained W-melting experiments on actively cooled ITER-like plasma facing unit in WEST
- 1.0552292 - ÚFP 2022 RIV SE eng J - Journal Article
Corre, Y. - Grosjean, A. - Gunn, J. P. - Krieger, K. - Ratynskaia, S. - Skalli-Fettachi, O. - Bourdelle, C. - Brezinsek, S. - Bruno, V. - Chanet, N. - Coenen, J. - Courtois, X. - Dejarnac, Renaud - Delmas, E. - Delpech, L. - Desgranges, C. - Diez, M. - Dubus, G. - Durif, A. - Ekedahl, A. - Fedorczak, N. - Firdaouss, M. - Gardarein, J.-L. - Gaspar, J. - Gerardin, Jonathan - Guillemaut, C. - Houry, M. - Loarer, T. - Maget, P. - Mandelbaum, P. - Mitteau, R. - Missirlian, M. - Moreau, P. - Nouailletas, R. - Nardon, E. - Pocheau, C. - Podolnik, A. - Reilhac, P. - Regal-Mezin, X. - Reux, C. - Richou, M. - Rigollet, F. - Schwob, J. - Thorén, E. - Tolias, P. - Tsitrone, E.
Sustained W-melting experiments on actively cooled ITER-like plasma facing unit in WEST.
Physica Scripta. Roč. 96, č. 12 (2021), č. článku 124057. ISSN 0031-8949. E-ISSN 1402-4896
EU Projects: European Commission(XE) 633053 - EUROfusion
Institutional support: RVO:61389021
Keywords : Heat flux calculation * Ir thermography * Plasma facing unit * Tungsten melting
OECD category: Fluids and plasma physics (including surface physics)
Impact factor: 3.081, year: 2021
Method of publishing: Limited access
https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1402-4896/ac326a
The consequences of tungsten (W) melting on divertor lifetime and plasma operation are high priority issues for ITER. Sustained and controlled W-melting experiment has been achieved for the first time in WEST on a poloidal sharp leading edge of an actively cooled ITER-like plasma facing unit (PFU). A series of dedicated high power steady state plasma discharges were performed to reach the melting point of tungsten. The leading edge was exposed to a parallel heat flux of about 100MW.m-2 for up to 5 s providing a melt phase of about 2 s without noticeable impact of melting on plasma operation (radiated power and tungsten impurity content remained stable at constant input power) and no melt ejection were observed. The surface temperature of theMBwas monitored by a high spatial resolution (0.1mm/pixel) infrared camera viewing the melt zone from the top of the machine. The melting discharge was repeated three times resulting in about 6 s accumulated melting duration leading to material displacement from three similar pools. Cumulated on the overall sustained melting periods, this leads to excavation depth of about 230 µmfollowed by a re-solidified tungsten bump of 200 µmin the JxB direction.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0327420
Number of the records: 1