Development of a concept and basis for the DEMO diagnostic and control system

•An initial concept and basis for the DEMO diagnostic and control system is presented.•The main control issues for the burn phase of the plasma have been allocated to a reduced set of diagnostics and actuators.•A set of 10 high level control requirements is formulated to guide the further developmen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Fusion engineering and design 2022-06, Vol.179, p.113122, Article 113122
Hauptverfasser: Biel, W., Ariola, M., Bolshakova, I., Brunner, K.J., Cecconello, M., Duran, I., Franke, Th, Giacomelli, L., Giannone, L., Janky, F., Krimmer, A., Luis, R., Malaquias, A., Marchiori, G., Marchuk, O., Mazon, D., Pironti, A., Quercia, A., Rispoli, N., Shawish, S. El, Siccinio, M., Silva, A., Sozzi, C., Tartaglione, G., Todd, T., Treutterer, W., Zohm, H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•An initial concept and basis for the DEMO diagnostic and control system is presented.•The main control issues for the burn phase of the plasma have been allocated to a reduced set of diagnostics and actuators.•A set of 10 high level control requirements is formulated to guide the further developments.•Details on the current set of diagnostic methods and channels, as well as an outline of the integration approaches into the tokamak, are given. An initial concept for the plasma diagnostic and control (D&C) system has been developed as part of European studies towards the development of a demonstration tokamak fusion reactor (DEMO). The main objective is to develop a feasible, integrated concept design of the DEMO D&C system that can provide reliable plasma control and high performance (electricity output) over extended periods of operation. While the fusion power is maximized when operating near to the operational limits of the tokamak, the reliability of operation typically improves when choosing parameters significantly distant from these limits. In addition to these conflicting requirements, the D&C development has to cope with strong adverse effects acting on all in vessel components on DEMO (harsh neutron environment, particle fluxes, temperatures, electromagnetic forces, etc.). Moreover, space allocation and plasma access are constrained by the needs for first wall integrity and optimization of tritium breeding. Taking into account these boundary conditions, the main DEMO plasma control issues have been formulated, and a list of diagnostic systems and channels needed for plasma control has been developed, which were selected for their robustness and the required coverage of control issues. For a validation and refinement of this concept, simulation tools are being refined and applied for equilibrium, kinetic and mode control studies.
ISSN:0920-3796
1873-7196
1873-7196
DOI:10.1016/j.fusengdes.2022.113122