Quick search Find article
Quick search
Find article

Fusion energy production from a deuterium-tritium plasma in the JET tokamak

JET Team

Show affiliations


Describes a series of experiments in the Joint European Torus (JET), culminating in the first tokamak discharges in deuterium-tritium fuelled mixture. The experiments were undertaken within limits imposed by restrictions on vessel activation and tritium usage. The objectives were: (i) to produce more than one megawatt of fusion power in a controlled way; (ii) to validate transport codes and provide a basis for accurately predicting the performance of deuterium-tritium plasmas from measurements made in deuterium plasmas; (iii) to determine tritium retention in the torus systems and to establish the effectiveness of discharge cleaning techniques for tritium removal; (iv) to demonstrate the technology related to tritium usage; and (v) to establish safe procedures for handling tritium in compliance with the regulatory requirements. A single-null X-point magnetic configuration, diverted onto the upper carbon target, with reversed toroidal magnetic field was chosen. Deuterium plasmas were heated by high power, long duration deuterium neutral beams from fourteen sources and fuelled also by up to two neutral beam sources injecting tritium. The results from three of these high performance hot ion H-mode discharges are described: a high performance pure deuterium discharge; a deuterium-tritium discharge with a 1% mixture of tritium fed to one neutral beam source; and a deuterium-tritium discharge with 100% tritium fed to two neutral beam sources. The TRANSP code was used to check the internal consistency of the measured data and to determine the origin of the measured neutron fluxes. In the best deuterium-tritium discharge, the tritium concentration was about 11% at the time of peak performance, when the total neutron emission rate was 6.0 × 1017 neutrons/s. The integrated total neutron yield over the high power phase, which lasted about 2 s, was 7.2 × 1017 neutrons, with an accuracy of ±7%. The actual fusion amplification factor, QDT was about 0.15

PACS

52.55.Fa Tokamaks, spherical tokamaks

52.55.Lf Field-reversed configurations, rotamaks, astrons, ion rings, magnetized target fusion, and cusps

52.55.Pi Fusion products effects (e.g., alpha-particles, etc.), fast particle effects

52.75.-d Plasma devices

Subjects

Plasma physics

Dates

Issue 2 (February 1992)



  1. Fusion energy production from a deuterium-tritium plasma in the JET tokamak

    JET Team 1992 Nucl. Fusion 32 187

  2. Concentrations of the decay products of 222Rn in a basement laboratory

    K S Parthasarathy 1977 Phys. Med. Biol. 22 341

  3. Colossal magnetoresistance

    A P Ramirez 1997 J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 9 8171

  4. Improvement in XAFS beamline BL01B1 at SPring-8

    T Uruga et al 2009 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 190 012041

  5. The study of solitons in DNA double helices

    Gen-fa Zhou 1989 Phys. Scr. 40 694

  6. Medical Applications of Computer Modelling: Cardiovascular and Ocular Systems

    Richard Clayton 2001 Physiol. Meas. 22 263

  7. Spark gaps for grid-cathode protection of pulsed travelling-wave tubes

    D J Mellor 1987 J. Phys. E: Sci. Instrum. 20 401

  8. The special theory of relativity

    2008 Phys. Educ. 43 236

  9. All-fibre micro-ring resonator based on tapered microfibre

    Dong Xiao-Wei et al 2008 Chinese Phys. B 17 1029

  10. Sulfur K-edge XANES study of S sorbed onto volcanic ashes

    F Farges et al 2009 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 190 012177

Related review articles

What's this?
View review articles related to this research to gain an insight into the key trends in this subject area. Related review articles are selected based on PACS/MSC codes, and are no more than three years old.

  1. Tokamak equilibria with nearly zero central current: the current hole
  2. The CRONOS suite of codes for integrated tokamak modelling
  3. Dust in magnetic fusion devices
More

View by subject




Export








Please login to access our web services, or create an account if you don't yet have one.

You must have cookies enabled in your web browser to be able to login.

Username
Password

Forgotten your password? Get a new one here.