DocumentCode
1423498
Title
Mission and Overview of a Fusion Development Facility
Author
Garofalo, Andrea M. ; Chan, Vincent S. ; Stambaugh, Ron D. ; Smith, John P. ; Wong, Clement P C
Author_Institution
Gen. Atomics, San Diego, CA, USA
Volume
38
Issue
3
fYear
2010
fDate
3/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
461
Lastpage
467
Abstract
The objective of the Fusion Development Facility (FDF) under consideration is to fill the gaps between ITER and current experiments and a fusion demonstration power plant (DEMO). FDF should carry forward advanced tokamak (AT) physics and enable development of fusion´s energy applications. Near-term AT physics and nonsuperconducting magnet technology will be used to achieve steady state with burn, producing 100-250 MW fusion power with modest energy gain (Q<5) in a modest sized device (between DIII-D and Joint European Torus). FDF will further develop all elements of AT physics for an advanced performance DEMO. With neutron flux at the outboard midplane of 1-2 MW/m2, continuous operation for periods of up to two weeks, and a goal of a duty factor of 0.3 per year, FDF can produce fluences of 3-6 MW??year/m2 in ten years of operation, for fusion nuclear component research and development. The development of blankets suitable for tritium, electricity, and hydrogen production will be done first in port modules. Then, the most promising candidates will be deployed as full blankets in FDF. Two to three full blankets and about a dozen port-blanket types could be tested. The goal of FDF is to demonstrate closure of the fusion fuel cycle, producing its own tritium. FDF, ITER, International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility, and other AT devices will provide the basis for a fusion DEMO power plant of the ARIES-AT type.
Keywords
Tokamak devices; fusion reactor blankets; hydrogen neutral atoms; hydrogen production; nuclear power; tritium; ARIES-AT type; H; ITER; advanced tokamak physics; blankets; current experiments; duty factor; electricity; fusion demonstration power plant; fusion development facility; fusion energy applications; fusion fuel cycle; fusion nuclear component; fusion power; hydrogen production; international fusion materials irradiation facility; neutron flux; nonsuperconducting magnet technology; tritium; Energy resources; fusion reactors; magnetic fields; neutron sources; physics; plasma devices; plasmas; proposals; tokamaks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0093-3813
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TPS.2010.2040168
Filename
5418987
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