260 research outputs found
Improved Collective Thomson Scattering measurements of fast ions at ASDEX Upgrade
Understanding the behaviour of the confined fast ions is important in both
current and future fusion experiments. These ions play a key role in heating
the plasma and will be crucial for achieving conditions for burning plasma in
next-step fusion devices. Microwave-based Collective Thomson Scattering (CTS)
is well suited for reactor conditions and offers such an opportunity by
providing measurements of the confined fast-ion distribution function resolved
in space, time and 1D velocity space. We currently operate a CTS system at
ASDEX Upgrade using a gyrotron which generates probing radiation at 105 GHz. A
new setup using two independent receiver systems has enabled improved
subtraction of the background signal, and hence the first accurate
characterization of fast-ion properties. Here we review this new dual-receiver
CTS setup and present results on fast-ion measurements based on the improved
background characterization. These results have been obtained both with and
without NBI heating, and with the measurement volume located close to the
centre of the plasma. The measurements agree quantitatively with predictions of
numerical simulations. Hence, CTS studies of fast-ion dynamics at ASDEX Upgrade
are now feasible. The new background subtraction technique could be important
for the design of CTS systems in other fusion experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in Proc. of "Fusion Reactor
Diagnostics", eds. F. P. Orsitto et al., AIP Conf. Pro
Background radioactivity of construction materials, raw substance and ready-made CaMoO4 crystals
The results of measurements of natural radioactive isotopes content in
different source materials of natural and enriched composition used for CaMoO4
scintillation crystal growing are presented. The crystals are to be used in the
experiment to search for double neutrinoless betas-decay of Mo-100.Comment: Contribution to Proc. of Int. Workshop on Radiopure Scintillators
RPSCINT 2013, 17-20.09.2013, Kyiv, Ukraine; to be published in EPJ Web of
Conferences; 4 pages, 2 figure and 1 table
Observations of core ion cyclotron emission on ASDEX Upgrade tokamak
The B-dot probe diagnostic suite on the ASDEX Upgrade tokamak has recently been upgraded with a new 125 MHz, 14 bit resolution digitizer to study ion cyclotron emission (ICE). While classic edge emission from the low field side plasma is often observed, we also measure waves originating from the core with fast fusion protons or beam injected deuterons being a possible emission driver. Comparing the measured frequency values with ion cyclotron harmonics present in the plasma places the origin of this emission on the magnetic axis, with the fundamental hydrogen/second deuterium cyclotron harmonic matching the observed values. The actual values range from ∼27 MHz at the on-axis toroidal field BT = −1.79 T to ∼40 MHz at BT = −2.62 T. When the magnetic axis position evolves during this emission, the measured frequency values track the changes in the estimated on-axis cyclotron frequency values. Core ICE is usually a transient event lasting ∼100 ms during the neutral beam startup phase. However, in some cases, core emission occurs in steady-state plasmas and lasts for longer than 1 s. These observations suggest an attractive possibility of using a non-perturbing ICE-based diagnostic to passively monitor fusion alpha particles at the location of their birth in the plasma core, in deuterium-tritium burning devices such as ITER and DEM
Microwave stray radiation losses in vacuum windows
Vacuum windows are required in magnetically confined fusion experiments to provide possibilities to observe the plasma in a wide range of electromagnetic wavelengths. The window disk consists of a dielectric, e.g. Fused Silica (SiO), Sapphire or Chemically Vapourised Diamond (CVD). As electromagnetic waves pass through the disk, a fraction of the beam power is dissipated resulting in a temperature increase of the disk. In Electron Cyclotron Waves (ECW) heated plasmas the dissipation in the window disk can be very high. The computation of dielectric losses for a collimated beam with known incidence angle, polarisation and loss tangent (measure for the intrinsic dielectric loss) is well established. However, the dielectric losses in diagnostic windows mostly result from microwave stray radiation, which results from a modest, but inevitable, fraction of non-absorbed ECW. This fraction diffuses in the vessel by many reflections into rays with random k-vector and with random polarisation. In this work the thermal load on the window disk by microwave stray radiation is assessed. The load by a collimated beam is studied as a function of incidence angle and polarisation allowing to average over a distribution of incident rays. An experiment was commissioned measuring the loss tangent of a number of commercially available SiO disks at low power in an open resonator, and subsequently measuring the dielectric heating of these disks at high power stray radiation using the facility ’MISTRAL’ at Wendelstein-7X. The experimental results are compared to modelling and it is demonstrated that, in the parameter range considered, single-pass fractional absorption may be applied while taking a safety margin that arises from the minima and maxima due to multiple reflections
Short-pulse frequency stabilization of a MW-class ECRH gyrotron at W7-X for CTS diagnostic
At the Wendelstein 7-X stellarator, a 174 GHz Collective Thomson Scattering (CTS) diagnostic will be implemented. One of the 140 GHz Electron Cyclotron Resonance Heating (ECRH) gyrotrons will be operated at around 174 GHz in a higher cavity mode, using it as source for the CTS mm-wave probing beam. To prevent any damage to the CTS receiver, a notch filter cuts out the high-power gyrotron signal at the entrance of the receiver. The bandwidth of the gyrotron signal determines the notch filter bandwidth. First proof-of-principle experiments on frequency stabilization were conducted on W7-X ECRH gyrotrons employing Phase-Locked Loop techniques. The gyrotron output frequency was controlled with the accelerating voltage, which is applied between the anode and cathode of the gyrotron diode-type Magnetron Injection Gun. Frequency stabilization experiments with 10 ms pulses were conducted at the gyrotron nominal frequency of 140 GHz as well as at 174 GHz. It is concluded that the gyrotron frequency could be stabilized for at least 3 ms at 140 GHz and 8 ms at 174 GHz. In the frequency spectrum, a clear main peak of the gyrotron frequency at 140 GHz with a full -15 dB linewidth of below 500 Hz was achieved
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