Fusion Fuss will Harness Energy of the Sun  
By sciencebase, Section News
Posted on Sat Apr 30th, 2005 at 12:35:19 PM PST  
 
After years of calculation, preparation and component production the
Wendelstein 7-X project has now entered a new phase: Assembly of the fusion
device at Greifswald Branch Institute of the Max-Planck-Institut für
Plasmaphysik (IPP). 

With industrial production still in progress, assembly of the large-scale
experiment was initiated by stringing the first magnet coil on to the plasma
vessel. Completion of the complex device will take about six years. 

The objective of fusion research is to gain energy from fusion of atomic
nuclei, as happens in the sun. In order to ignite the fusion fire, the
hydrogen plasma fuel in a future power plant has to be confined in magnetic
fields and heated to temperatures of over 100 million degrees. The purpose
of Wendelstein 7-X, which will be the world's largest fusion device of the
stellarator type, is to investigate the suitability of this concept for
application in a power plant. With discharges lasting up to 30 minutes it is
intended to demonstrate the essential property of the stellarator concept,
the capability of continuous operation. 
Components A ring of 50 superconducting magnet coils about 3.5 metres high
forms the core of the device. Cooled with liquid helium to superconduction
temperature close to absolute zero, they need hardly any energy after being
switched on. Their bizarre shapes are the result of sophisticated
optimisation calculations: They are designed to produce a particularly
stable and thermally insulating magnetic cage to confine the plasma. In
order to vary the magnetic field, a second set of 20 flat, likewise
superconducting coils is superposed on the stellarator coils. Despite the
high magnetic forces exerted, the coils are kept exactly in position by a
massive ring-shaped support structure. 

The entire coil ring is enclosed by a thermally insulating outer casing 16
metres in diameter, the cryostat. A cryogenic facility will provide 5000
watts of helium refrigeration to cool the magnets and support structure, i.e
a total of 1425 tons of material, to superconduction temperature. Located
inside the coil ring is the plasma vessel, comprising 20 segments, which is
specially shaped to match the twisted plasma ring. The plasma will be
observed and heated through a total of 299 apertures. These are connected
with the outer wall of the cryostat by an equal number of ports passing
between the coils with good thermal insulation. The entire device comprises
five almost identical modules that are each pre-assembled and then
subsequently joined into a ring in the experimentation hall. 

Assembly At the beginning of April assembly started with installation of the
first half-module: For this purpose, the first segment of the plasma vessel
was hoisted into pre-assembly rig lb and the first magnet coil, weighing six
tons, was carefully strung onto the vessel segment with a special rotatable
grab through the just millimetre wide gaps. Only then can the second segment
of the plasma vessel be brazed on and thermal insulation at the brazing seam
be completed. This superinsulation separates the low-temperature magnet
coils from their warm surroundings: It consists of exactly fitting
fibreglass-reinforced synthetic panels in which copper mesh for better
thermal conduction is embedded. Integrated in the panels are several layers
of wrinkled synthetic foil coated with aluminium and containing intermediate
layers of glass silk. On completion of the insulation four more stellarator
coils and two of the auxiliary coils will be strung onto the vessel segment
from the front and back and geometrically exactly aligned on assembly
supports of their own. A segment of the support ring will then be pushed
against the coils and bolted. After much other additional work and numerous
control measurements the first half-module will then be ready. 

This structure, weighing 50 tons, will now be hoisted into the second
assembly rig in a special harness. The second - mirror symmetrically
constructed - half-module, meanwhile assembled on pre-assembly rig la, is
placed opposite and the two are hydraulically joined. The two segments of
the support ring are aligned to one another and bolted, and the segments of
the plasma vessel are brazed. At the same time the thermal insulation of the
brazed seam is closed: The first of five modules, weighing 100 tons, will
then be ready in shell form. 

The conductors for electrical connection of the coils are now attached - a
very tricky job. The rigid, up to 14-metre-long superconductors, produced by
Jülich Research Centre, are already bent to the right shape. Twenty-four
lengths of the unwieldy, but sensitive conductor are needed per module.
After electrical connection and brazing of the superconductors the
connections are insulated against high voltage and their helium proofing
checked. Next comes the piping for the helium cooling of the coils.
Everything has to be checked as leak-proof. Once the sensors and measuring
cables are installed, the first module can leave the assembly rig - after a
scheduled total construction time of 28 weeks. 

In the experimentation hall Transported into the experimentation hall on a
special carriage, the module is hoisted onto the assembly rig and into the
bottom shell of the outer vessel; connections and supports are attached. The
120-ton component is now lifted onto the actual machine foundation and
additionally provided with auxiliary supports. The top shell of the outer
vessel is put on and brazed. Sixty ports connecting the plasma and outer
vessels through the cold coil region now have to be incorporated together
with their thermal insulation. 

Now come the in-vessel components, particularly the numerous parts of the
divertor. The plates will remove impurities and some of the thermal energy
from the plasma. The remaining energy is taken up by the wall protection
comprising steel panels and a heat shield clad with graphite tiles. The
fivefold symmetry of the device is repeated in the divertor: The two times
five divertors are composed of divertor plates and guide plates, regulating
coil, and cryopump with the necessary piping. Many of the components,
including pumps, heat shield, and divertor modules, are now being built in
the Central Technical Services division of IPP at Garching; the divertor
plates, regulating coils, and steel panels are being manufactured by
industry. The acceptance tests are also under way at Garching: These concern
the leak and degassing rates of the components and the loading capability of
the divertor components at high heat fluxes. 

By the time all five modules have been installed in the experimentation hall
the work steps taken hitherto will have been performed five times. Finally,
the five major components have to be joined: The brazing seams of the plasma
and outer vessels have to be closed, and the magnets have to be connected to
the power and helium supplies. This will be followed by the main power
connections, cooling pipes, and repeated control measurements and leak
tests: The basic machine will then be complete.
 
-DonW-
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Keith Nagel [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, May 03, 2005 11:26 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: RE: Report from Max Planck work

Hey RC,

You may have to repost; I'm getting a 403 forbidden error on the link, even
the root domain rejects requests. Can you cut and paste the story?

K.

-----Original Message-----
From: RC Macaulay [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 03, 2005 1:05 PM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: Report from Max Planck work


Work continues
http://www.sciscoop.com/story/2005/4/29/7401/23280

Richard

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