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Fast Time Response Electromagnetic Disruption Mitigation Concept

R. Raman, T. R. Jarboe, J. E. Menard, S. P. Gerhardt, M. Ono, L. Baylor, W.-S. Lay

Fusion Science and Technology / Volume 68 / Number 4 / November 2015 / Pages 797-805

Technical Note / dx.doi.org/10.13182/FST14-916

First Online Publication:September 28, 2015
Updated:November 5, 2015

An important and urgent issue for ITER is predicting and controlling disruptions. Tokamaks and spherical tokamaks have the potential to disrupt. Methods to rapidly quench the discharge after an impending disruption is detected are essential to protect the vessel and internal components. The warning time for the onset of some disruptions in tokamaks could be <10 ms, which poses stringent requirements on the disruption mitigation system for reactor systems. In this proposed method, a cylindrical boron nitride projectile containing a radiative payload composed of boron, boron nitride, or beryllium particulate matter and weighing ~15 g is accelerated to velocities on the order of 1 to 2 km/s in <2 ms in a linear rail gun accelerator. A partially fragmented capsule is then injected into the tokamak discharge in the 3- to 6-ms timescale, where the radiative payload is dispersed. The device referred to as an electromagnetic particle injector has the potential to meet the short warning timescales for which a reactor disruption mitigation system must be built. The system is fully electromagnetic, with no mechanical moving parts, which ensures high reliability after a period of long standby.