Title :
A high-speed beam of lithium droplets for collecting diverted energy and particles in ITER
Author_Institution :
Los Alamos Nat. Lab., NM, USA
Abstract :
A high-speed (160 m/s) beam (0.14×0.86 m) of liquid-lithium droplets passing through the divertor region(s) below (and above) the main plasma has the potential to replace and out-perform conventional solid divertor plates in both heat and particle removal. In addition to superior heat-collection properties, the lithium beam would: (1) remove impurities; (2) have a negligible MHD (magnetohydrodynamic) lithium-circulation pressure drop; (3) exhibit low-recycle divertor operation compatible with lower-hybrid current drive, H-mode plasma confinement, and no flow reversal in the edge plasma; (4) be insensitive to plasma shifts; and (5) protect solid structures from the plasma thermal energy for those disruptions that deposit energy preferentially into the divertor while simultaneously being rapidly reestablished after a major disruption. Scoping calculations identifying the beam configuration and the droplet dynamics, including formation, MHD effects, gravitational effects, thermal response and hydrodynamics are presented. Limitations and uncertainties are also discussed
Keywords :
drops; fusion reactor materials; heat transfer; hydrodynamics; liquid metals; lithium; magnetohydrodynamics; H-mode plasma confinement; Li droplets; MHD effects; diverted energy; formation; gravitational effects; heat-collection properties; high-speed beam; hydrodynamics; impurities; low-recycle divertor operation; lower-hybrid current drive; particles; plasma shifts; plasma thermal energy; solid structures; thermal response; Drives; Impurities; Lithium; Magnetic properties; Magnetohydrodynamics; Particle beams; Plasma confinement; Plasma properties; Protection; Solids;
Conference_Titel :
Fusion Engineering, 1989. Proceedings., IEEE Thirteenth Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Knoxville, TN
DOI :
10.1109/FUSION.1989.102452