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Overview: Fusion System Analysis and Engineering
This specialty deals with current approaches
to the design of a fusion power plants. For both the magnetic and
the inertial confinement schemes, problems of particle confinement,
plasma heating, ICF chamber dynamics, fusion materials, fusion neutronics,
safety and environmental impacts are analyzed. Experimental facilities
for plasma research include a Spheromak plasma experiment, plasma-surface
interaction experiments, and ICF chamber liquid protection experiment. Graduate Fusion Engineering
Curriculum. Morse, Peterson, Leung, Fowler(Emeritus), Thomassen
Theoretical Aspects
of Spheromaks
Principal Investigators: Morse, Fowler (Emeritus)
The spheromak is a very compact
magnetic configuration to confine hot plasmas in a fusion reactor,
but one at very early stages of development. Recent theoretical
work suggests that energy confinement in spheromaks is far better
than previously believed. Experiments on the SSPX spheromak at Livermore
are addressing this and other questions about spheromaks. Recent
studies indicate that the “nuclear island” cost for
a spheromak fusion reactor would be much less than that for the
tokamak concept that is the mainline research effort today.
Gas Dynamics and Liquid Response
in Inertial Confinement Fusion Target Chambers
Principal Investigator: Peterson
| This research studies x-ray driven ablation,
blast propagation and transient condensation for removing vapor
generated in inertial confinement fusion target chambers. Another
component of the project studies liquid jet phenomena in vacuum
environments. The work focuses both on issues important to chamber
dynamics in the National Ignition Facility, and to future inertial
fusion energy power plants. Research support comes from the
Department of Energy Office of Fusion Energy Science. |
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Magnetic Confinement
Fusion: BCTX Section
Principal Investigator: Morse
Overview
The UCBNE department is home of the Berkeley Compact Toroidal
Experiment (BCTX). Operated by Professor Ed Morse, the BCTX
is a spheromak experiment with the unique capability of producing
auxiliary-heated spheromaks. The machine has a lower hybrid
drive system which can deliver up to 20 MW of RF power at 432
MHz to the plasma for a 100 us pulse length. |
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Given complete coupling of RF energy into the plasma, this represents
sufficient energy to heat the plasma electrons to 1 keV. Experiments
at such temperatures offer the opportunity to explore ideal MHD
pressure limits and energy confinement regimes not accessible in
other devices.
Installed diagnostics on this machine include Thomson scattering
for electron temperature, magnetic field B-dot loops, a laser interferometer
for density measurement, several spectrometers for impurity ion
spectroscopy, and an ion Doppler temperature measurement system.
Current experiments are focused on determining electron heat confinement
in spheromaks using the RF heating source as a heat pulse. To date,
electron temperatures up to 150 eV have been measured in BCTX.
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Magnetic Confinement
Fusion -- Spheromak Section
Principal Investigator: Thomassen
Overview
Berkeley students are able to participate in cutting-edge
magnetic fusion energy research with teams at LLNL. The work
includes both experimental and theoretical studies involving
the LLNL
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Inertial
Confinement Fusion: Target Design Section
Principal Investigator: Peterson
Overview
The principle goal of indirect-drive ICF research is to convert
the energy of a driver (either laser or ion beam) into a uniform
radiation field directed onto a fuel capsule in the center
of a hohlraum. The hohlraum target must be designed in such
a way as to achieve this energy conversion efficiently and
uniformly.
At Berkeley, students participate in the design of fusion
targets with teams at the LBNL
Accelerator and Fusion Research Division.
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Neutron Sources: RTNS
Section
Principal Investigator: Morse
Overview
The Rotating Target Neutron Source is an accelerator-based source of D-T fusion neutrons. This
machine has a 400 kilovolt Cockroft-Walton type accelerator
and a rotating, water-cooled target which contains tritium. |
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| The accelerator provides a 5 mA beam of deuterons,
which interact with the tritium on the rotating target to make
fusion neutrons. These neutrons have an energy of 14 MeV and
are produced roughly isotropically from the point of beam impact
on the target. The available neutron yield from this source
is between 1.0E12 and 6.0E12 neutrons per second. |
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| The target is constructed so that
material samples can be placed within one centimeter of the
neutron source point. Fluxes up to 5.0E11/cm2 over a volume
of several cubic centimeters are available. |
Current studies using RTNS are materials tests for the National
Ignition Facility (NIF) under construction at Lawrence Livermore
National Laboratory, activation studies for radiological safety
of fusion facilities including NIF, and measurements of nuclear
cross sections and detector devices for neutrons at fusion energy.
Operations using the RTNS machine are currently supported under
contract with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
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Heavy Ion
Fusion
Principal Investigator: Verboncoeur
Investigation of effects of propagation of neutrals
generated by impact of halo ions on wall surfaces, leading to formation
of electrons and non beam ions which can disrupt beam propagation.
Collaboration with the Virtual National Laboratory, supported by
the Department of Energy.
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