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The first experiments in SST-1
30
Citations
9
References
2015
Year
Superconducting MaterialEngineeringPlasma PhysicsMagnetic Confinement FusionSteady StatePlasma TheorySuperconductivityControlled Nuclear FusionPlasma ConfinementElectrical EngineeringPhysicsValidation PhaseNeutrino AstronomyMagnetic ConfinementHot SpotsNuclear AstrophysicsFirst ExperimentsMagnetic Confinement Fusion PhysicsExperimental Nuclear PhysicsHigh-temperature SuperconductivityNatural SciencesCryogenics
A steady state superconducting tokamak (SST-1) has been commissioned after the successful experimental and engineering validations of its critical sub-systems. During the 'engineering validation phase' of SST-1; the cryostat was demonstrated to be leak-tight in all operational scenarios, 80 K thermal shields were demonstrated to be uniformly cooled without regions of 'thermal runaway and hot spots', the superconducting toroidal field magnets were demonstrated to be cooled to their nominal operational conditions and charged up to 1.5 T of the field at the major radius. The engineering validations further demonstrated the assembled SST-1 machine shell to be a graded, stress–strain optimized and distributed thermo-mechanical device, apart from the integrated vacuum vessel being validated to be UHV compatible etc. Subsequently, 'field error components' in SST-1 were measured to be acceptable towards plasma discharges. A successful breakdown in SST-1 was obtained in SST-1 in June 2013 assisted with electron cyclotron pre-ionization in the second harmonic mode, thus marking the 'first plasma' in SST-1 and the arrival of SST-1 into the league of contemporary steady state devices.
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