DocumentCode :
1948231
Title :
R&D on in-vessel dust and tritium management in ITER
Author :
Le Guern, F. ; Ciattaglia, S. ; Counsell, G. ; Kim, J. ; Walsh, M. ; Denkevitz, A. ; Endstrasser, N. ; Eixenberger, H. ; Gauthier, E. ; Jordan, T. ; Kammerloher, L. ; Kuznetsov, M. ; Neu, R. ; Redlinger, R. ; Reiter, B. ; Rohde, V. ; Xu, Z.
Author_Institution :
Fusion for Energy Joint Undertaking, Barcelona, Spain
fYear :
2011
fDate :
26-30 June 2011
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
5
Abstract :
In a tokamak, plasma-wall interactions can result in production of dust. During operation, the tritium present in the Vacuum Vessel (VV) can then be trapped in the in-vessel materials but also in dust. The vacuum vessel represents the first confinement barrier to this radioactive material. In the event of a postulated accident involving ingress of steam into the VV, hydrogen could in principle be produced by chemical reaction with hot metal and dust. If the ingress of air into the VV is also postulated, reaction of air with hydrogen and/or dust cannot be completely excluded and could lead to a possible explosion which could challenge the VV tightness. In order to prevent such accidents and their radiological consequences, limitations on the accumulation of dust and tritium in the VV and on the air ingress are imposed. Correlatively, ITER has defined a strategy for the control of in-vessel dust and tritium inventories based on both measurement and removal techniques. In this context, this paper reports on the status of tasks under F4E responsibility aiming at developing some of the measurement systems and necessary R&D for the validation of the ITER strategy.
Keywords :
Tokamak devices; fusion reactor design; fusion reactor operation; fusion reactor safety; plasma diagnostics; plasma toroidal confinement; plasma-wall interactions; ITER strategy; chemical reaction; confinement barrier; dust production; in-vessel dust; in-vessel materials; plasma-wall interactions; postulated accident; radioactive material; radiological consequences; tritium management; vacuum vessel; Monitoring; diagnostics; dust; hydrogen; safety;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Fusion Engineering (SOFE), 2011 IEEE/NPSS 24th Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
ISSN :
1078-8891
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-0669-1
Electronic_ISBN :
1078-8891
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/SOFE.2011.6052249
Filename :
6052249
Link To Document :
بازگشت