Demonstrating neutral beam injection at ITER scale
Two test beds are under development at the Neutral Beam Test Facility—SPIDER which will test and develop the ITER full-scale radio-frequency negative ion source; and MITICA, where a full-power 1MeV accelerated beam will be tested at full pulse length in demonstration of the heating neutral beam used in ITER.
The SPIDER beam source is an ITER-like full-size radio-frequency-driven plasma source capable of extracting a negative deuterium ion beam (D¯ beam) of 70A and then accelerating it to energies of 100 keV. It will contribute to optimizing the production and extraction of negative ions as well as to establishing operating techniques. It will also offer the chance to measure the uniformity of the extracted beam for the first time at ITER scale. Operating the SPIDER test bed is a necessary milestone on the path to heating the future ITER plasma.
After five years of manufacturing and lessons learned, the beam source was delivered to the neutral beam facility where it successfully passed all site acceptance tests. More recently, on 16 February, the five-tonne beam source was transferred from the clean room where it was stored and tested to its final operating position inside the SPIDER vacuum chamber.
The copper grid apertures (which guide the neutral beam into 1,280 small beamlets) as well as the overall position of the beam source were thoroughly controlled by metrologists using laser trackers to ensure the correct aiming of the beam. The final auxiliary services (water, electrical, radio frequency, thermocouples) were connected and the vacuum vessel was closed and evacuated, allowing the ITER Organization, the European Domestic Agency, and Consorzio RFX to start integrated commissioning activities.
This important step forward for the ITER neutral beam program also represents the on-time achievement of an ITER Council milestone.
*SPIDER = Source for the Production of Ions of Deuterium Extracted from RF plasma.
Read a recent report on the European Domestic Agency website.