Paper
12 November 1993 Helium-cooled divertor module for fusion devices
Chandrakant B. Baxi
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The advanced fusion machines such as TPX, NET, and ITER have to be designed to handle a heat flux of about 5 to 15 MW/m2 in the diverter region. The present conceptual designs use water cooling. However water leaks will have very serious consequences in these machines. Cooling with a gas like helium is a very attractive alternative, if the pumping power can be limited to a reasonable value. Different concepts to cool diverter by helium gas were compared. It was found that it is feasible to remove significant steady state heat flux (10 to 20 MW/m2) by using helium at a pressure of 4 MPa (580 psia) and with pumping power less than 0.5% of the power removed, by using optimized designs. From pumping power consideration, various concepts rank in the following order: offset fins (best), fins, jets, 3-D roughness, 2-D roughness, smooth tubes (worst). A module based on this study has been designed and fabricated for a steady state operation at 10 MW/m2 and was tested at the High Heat Flux facility at Sandia National Laboratory. This paper also presents some preliminary studies of helium cooled ITER diverter.
© (1993) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chandrakant B. Baxi "Helium-cooled divertor module for fusion devices", Proc. SPIE 1997, High Heat Flux Engineering II, (12 November 1993); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.163794
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Helium

Heat flux

Copper

Thermal engineering

Beryllium

Thermal effects

Finite element methods

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