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Dust Generation in Tokamaks: Overview of Beryllium and Tungsten Dust Studies in JET with the ITER-Like Wall

Authors :
Rubel, M.
Widdowson, A.
Grzonka, J.
Moon, Sunwoo
Petersson, P.
Fortuna-Zaleśna, E.
Baron-Wiechec, A.
Ashikawa, N.
Asakura, Nobuyuki
Hatano, Y.
Isobe, Kanetsugu
Kurotaki, Hironori
Masuzaki, S.
Oya, Y.
Oyaizu, Makoto
Tokitani, M.
Contributors, JET
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Operation of the JET tokamak with beryllium and tungsten ITER-like wall provides unique opportunity for detailed studies on dust generation: quantity, morphology, location, etc. The programme carried out in response to ITER needs for safety assessment comprises: (i) remotely controlled vacuum cleaning of the divertor; (ii) local sampling of loosely bound matter from plasma-facing components (PFC); (iii) collection of mobilized dust on various erosion-deposition probes located in the divertor and in the main chamber. Results of comprehensive analyses performed by a number of complementary techniques, e.g. a range of microscopy methods, electron and ion spectroscopy, liquid scintillography and thermal desorption, are summarized by following points: (a) Total amount of dust collected by vacuum cleaning after three campaigns is about 1–1.4 g per campaign (19.1–23.5 h plasma operation), i.e. over 100 times smaller than in JET operated with carbon walls (i.e. in JETC). (b) Two major categories of Be dust are identified: flakes of co-deposits formed on PFC and droplets (2–10 μm in diameter). Small quantifies, below 1 g, of Be droplets and splashes are associated mainly with melting of beryllium limiters. (c) Tungsten dust occurs mainly as partly molten flakes originating from the W-coated tiles.<br />The 13the International Symposium on Fusion Nuclear Technology(ISFNT-13)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.jairo.........e7df21130741ab4688f636518da455b7