EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005 Progress with T-recovery techniques 2004-5 P Coad...

21
PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005 Progress with T- Progress with T- recovery techniques recovery techniques 2004-5 2004-5 P Coad 1 , GF Counsell 1 , G. Dinescu 6 , H. G. Esser 4 , JA Ferreira 2 , MJ Forrest 1 , M. Freisinger 4 , K Gibson 1 , C Grisolia 3 , A Grosman 3 , H-K Hinssen 4 , C. Hopf 5 , W. Jacob 5 , A Kreter 4 , K Kuhn 4 , W Jacob 5 , A. Lyssoivan 4 , R Moormann 4 , J-M. Noterdaeme 5 , V Philipps 4 , H. Reimer 4 , V. Rohde 5 , U. Samm 4 , A. Semerok 3 , G. Sergienko 4 , and M. Schluter 5 , FL Tabarés 2 , E Tristrone 3 1 UKAEA 2 CIEMAT 3 CEA 4 IPP-Juelich 5 IPP-Garching 6 Romanian Ass.

Transcript of EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005 Progress with T-recovery techniques 2004-5 P Coad...

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Progress with T-recovery Progress with T-recovery techniques 2004-5techniques 2004-5P Coad1, GF Counsell1, G. Dinescu6, H. G. Esser4, JA Ferreira2, MJ Forrest1, M. Freisinger4, K Gibson1, C Grisolia3, A Grosman3, H-K Hinssen4, C. Hopf5, W. Jacob5, A Kreter4, K Kuhn4, W Jacob5, A. Lyssoivan4, R Moormann4, J-M. Noterdaeme5, V Philipps4, H. Reimer4, V. Rohde5, U. Samm4, A. Semerok3, G. Sergienko4, and M. Schluter5, FL Tabarés2, E Tristrone3

1 UKAEA2 CIEMAT3 CEA4 IPP-Juelich5 IPP-Garching6 Romanian Ass.

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Both retention mitigation and in situ detritiation will likely be needed in ITER

• ITER with planned PFC mix will need

– a factor 30-200 reduction in tritium retention

or

– a factor 10,000 increase in tritium removal rates

compared to model predictions and extrapolations

• Almost certainly a combination of both will be required

– even if inventory limit takes 8 months to reach, removal rates would still need to be a factor 50 improved to clean vessel in 4 month shut-down

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

• Many techniques and technologies under consideration (though world-wide effort is still small)

• Several issues -

– intra-shot, inter-shot, overnight, weekly

– Collateral damage to in-vessel components (inc. PFC’s)

– Compatibility with plant (pumps, heating systems)

– Degree of intervention (vessel let-up?, fields energised?, vessel entry?)

– Access (i.e. to all regions of retention)

• Existence of a Be Wall (in particular) impacts on many of these issues

Be Wall in ITER may help reduce retention but also complicates other approaches

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

RF assisted O2 GDC in TEXTOR

Trilateral Euregio Cluster Assoziation EURATOM-Forschungszentrum JülichInstitut für Plasmaphysik

Total ion flux: 6 A

Wall area: 35 m2

1·1014 O+/cm2 s

Wall(-)

Removal rate:neutral pressure pumping speed

RF 13.2 MHz250 W

DC 6A (feedback controlled),400-600V

Electrode (+)

Sheath potential 280-400 V (O+ impact energy)

O2 + He

10-3 mbar

O+,O

CO

C

O+

CO, CO2, O2, He

Differentially pumped

quadrupole mass

spectrometer (QMS)

• CO weakly dependent on O2

• CO2 rises with O2

• CO/CO2 independent of He

A Kreter et al

~150C

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

• HD molecules about 7% of removed C

H+D atoms about 28% of C (assuming H:D = 1:1), in agreement with previous observations

• C removal rate 2.3x1019 C/s (5.2 g C in total)

Removal rates by RFA-O2 GDC

Trilateral Euregio Cluster Assoziation EURATOM-Forschungszentrum JülichInstitut für Plasmaphysik

GDC GDC

Integral data from QMS

CO

CO2

HD

00:00 01:00 02:00 03:00 04:000.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

rem

ova

l, 10

23 a

tom

s

time, hh:mm

0

1

2

3

4

5

rem

ove

d C

, g

A Kreter et al

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

ICRF conditioning in O2 in TEXTOR

• All injected O2 converted into CO, CO2

• Only 15% of C removal during ICRF low duty cycle

• CO+CO2 outgassing until 140 sec: ~4·1020 O-atoms

about half of O amount absorbed by wall, wall not saturated

Typical shot:

• Bt = 2.3 T

• ICRF 29 MHz 50 kW (absorbed) 1-6 s

• Continuous He flow

• Fast O2 injection 2.1·1020 O/s 1.1-5.1 s (8.5x1020 in total)

Trilateral Euregio Cluster Assoziation EURATOM-Forschungszentrum JülichInstitut für Plasmaphysik

0 50 100 1500.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

time, s

par

tial

pre

ssu

re, 1

0-3 m

bar

mass 44 mass 28 mass 32 mass 4 mass 3

CO2

He+D2

CO

O2

#97084IC

RF

HD

A Kreter et al

C removal rate 1.8x1019 C/s

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Trilateral Euregio Cluster Assoziation EURATOM-Forschungszentrum JülichInstitut für Plasmaphysik

TechniqueC removal rate

Advantages DrawbacksPossible

improvements

Oxygen venting

2.5·1018 C/s for 0.3mbar, Twall=620K

•simplicity•access to all wall areas•selective removal of redeposited layers

•low removal rates•Twall > 600K needed

•higher O pressure

Glow discharge conditioning

2-3·1019 C/s•higher removal rates •applicable for low Twall

•incompatible with steady state B•non-selective carbon removal (?)•limited wall area access

•higher GD current•higher pumping rate

ICRF conditioning

1.8·1019 C/s for 1:10 duty cycle for pump out

•higher removal rates•applicable for low Twall

•compatible with steady state magnetic field

•O injection limited by pressure limit at antenna box•non-selective carbon removal (?)•limited wall area access

•higher pumping rate (also for steady state ICRF)

Summary of oxygen cleaning in TEXTORIntegral TEXTOR carbon redeposition rate ~ 2.7·1020 C/s

A Kreter et al

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

O2 GDC in AUG

Use of He/O2 mixture plasmas in AUG• Stability of glow discharge• Less sputtering compared to pure O2 discharge or heavier noble gas admixtures• Oxidation of W in O2 plasma saturates and is reversible in an H2 discharge• No erosion in shielded places: tile gaps, behind first wall, and in deep in the divertor

Exposure time (min)Ch. Hopf et al

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Thermal Desorption spectra of H2 and CH4 from gaps

a-C:H coated Thermocoax 1mm

Al mask: 4mmDepos. in H2/CH4 GDCleaning in 5%O2/He GD

As deposited After 45’ GD

J.A. Ferreira and F.L. Tabarés, CIEMAT

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

• Co-deposit removed at ~0.5m/h at 185 C (prob. higher at 130 C)20m co-deposit removed in 2d also removes 0.7mm EK98 (ass. surface oxidation)

• Eroded surface becomes roughened & chemisorbtion forms stable C-O complexes (to >700C)

125C

135C130C

~ 1mm EK98

~ 4

0m

/h E

K98 • Oxidation rates of TEXTOR

EK98 for 2.3% O3 in O2

• Peaks at ~50m/h at 130C

• Decreases with burn-off

Trilateral Euregio Cluster Assoziation EURATOM-Forschungszentrum JülichInstitut für Plasmaphysik

Oxidation with Ozone

H-K Hinssen et al

EFDA/04-1174

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

N2 seeding – impact of N ions on a-C:H

• N2+ beam irradiation of a-C:H films in

MAJESTIX

• Chemical sputtering dominates a-C:H erosion by N2

+ at low energies

• Erosion yields remarkably high: ~1 above ~50eV

W Jacob et al

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

• Flash-lamp assembly used for in-vessel trials transferred to BeHF

• Operated remotely – PSU and water cooling outside BeHF

• OPL and G4 tiles exposed to ~80x250J pulses at range of locations

• Tritium off-gas measured

Flash-lamp trials in JET BeHF

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

• Flash-lamp footprint covers ~30cm2

• Surface temperature rises to ~1200K during 250J flash on plasma-damaged tile

• Pulse half-width is short - less than 150 s is typical

• Peak power density ~180MW/m2 at target for 250J flash

Flash-lamp trials in JET BeHF

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Treated areas

Untreated areas

Heavily treated area with initially thick powdery deposit

• Clearly visible changes to co-deposit in treated areas

Flash-lamp trials in JET BeHF

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

-10

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

1700 1750 1800 1850 1900 1950 2000 2050 2100

Channel Number

Coun

ts

JET 8360 (reference)

JET 8374 (treated)

• ~0.5 GBq of T released in ~20ms exposure to flash-lamp from ~50cm2 of G4 tile

• No observed T release from OPL

• NRA spectrum for D, shows that D is absent from the outer 0.5-1 m at the surface – but at least 7m codeposit remaining

• No C13 on exposed regions compared to unexposed control

• T analysis at FZK shows difference between exposed and unexposed regions within statistical variation

• Total T content ~5GBq on peak regions of G4 tile

• Results consistent with removal rate ~0.2m/flash at 250J – lower than expected

• Flash-lamp focus less sharp than predicted, energy density ~3J/cm2 at 250J.

• Trials will be repeated in November at 500J, now available.

Flash-lamp trials in JET BeHF

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

(0.4-0.5) J/cm2 for co-deposited layer

(2.5±0.5) J/cm2 for graphite

First trials with high 100 ns repetition rate 250W mean power Nd-YAG laser :

Laser treatment TORE SUPRA

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

20 W, λ≈1 μm, 10kHz, 100ns pulse duration

h~50m

h~0m10 scanings

h~50m1 scaning, 2s

TEXTOR tile

• Ablation at 50 cm• Field depth of some centimetres• 100 W laser power 1 m2/h of 50 μm co-deposit

Laser treatment TORE SUPRA

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

YAG V1 IPG Fiberlaser

Wavelength (nm) 1064 1064Power (W) 200 20Repetition rate (kHz) 10 20Energy (J) 20 1Pulse length (ns) 70 120Divergence M2 35 1,6Beam diameter (mm) 1 0,25Depth of focus (mm) ±2 ±30Fluence (J/cm2) 2.5 2

TORE SUPRA

Trials of scanning Fibrelaser planned for JET in vessel or BeHF

Laser treatment

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Ar torch cleaning

•Plume: ~ 2mm; length ~ 10mm •Optimal distance to surface ~ 10mm•RF power: 10 to 100 W•Water cooling system needed•Pressure: 10-1100 mbar (argon)

Detritiation assessment by exposure to a small plasma torch planned for 2005-2006 WP:

•Surface scanning•Torch diameter reduced to 20 mm•RF power increased to 200 W•Test on codeposited material•Test in magnetic Field

G Dinescu et al

TORE SUPRA

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Selected other activities World-wide:

• ICRH on LHD

PICRH~8-149kW, 38.47MHz, 3 loop antennas, He 0.01-0.1 Pa, 3s on:2s offDischarge stable even at low pressure but H removal ~5-10 x higher with 20-40kW GDC at 5Pa He

• O-ventilation, O-ICR, 4:1He/O-ICR and O-GDC + O-removal explored on HT-7

Fastest removal with 1.5Pa O-GDC (~5.1x1014 C/cm2s). Factor 3-4 lower in 0.1Pa O-ICR and 6-10 lower in 4:1He/O-ICRWall temp only 400-450CHe/O-ICR reduces oxygen retention – 5.8x1012 O/cm2sHe-ICR or He-GDC both effective to remove oxygen (10-50% in 0.5-1h)

• Mitigated disruption removal: ITPA-led Proposal submitted (P Stangeby leading) throught JET TFE for trials using newly fitted fast, high throughput valve

EU-PWI TF meeting, Caderache, 17-19 October 2005

Be (and its alloys) may act at significant trap –

O2 from leak:15mg/shotIntrinsic O in Be 1.5 - 5mg/shot - convective erosion50mg/shot - ELMs (no melt loss) 0.1% O impurity0.5g/shot - Unmitigated disruptionsTarget CFC erosion0.15g/shot (reduces from 2-5g/shot)

Conclusions - - Purity of Be a critically important issue (how would O2 de-tritiation schemes affect this?)

- Melt loss during Type I ELM interaction with limiter Be could result in large T retention

- Be might substantially reduce aC:H T retention - but still significant due to ELM erosion

Need to explore T-removal techniques for Be trapping?

aC:H is not the only T-trap