Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
272110 Fusion Engineering and Design 2012 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Permeator Against Vacuum (PAV) has been conceived as the simplest, cost effective and reliable technology system dedicated to tritium extraction from breeding liquid metals.An optimal design of a PAV requires a detailed hydraulic design optimization for established operational ranges (HCLL at low velocities of ∼1 mm/s or DCLL in the ranges of tens of cm/s). The present work analyses the PAV extraction efficiency dependency on the design parameters as optimum on-line Tritium Extraction System (TES). Three different models have been built for that purpose: one through physically refined 1D tritium transport computation using TMAP7 (unique simulation tool with QA for ITER); and two further detailed models on 2D/3D FEM tool (COMSOL Multi-physics 4.0). The geometry used in this work is a simplification of Fuskite® conceptual design developed at CIEMAT, consisting of a set of cylindrical and concentric α-Fe double membranes enclosing a vacuumed space and in contact with in-pipe flowing LiPb eutectic.The aim of this paper is to give the first steps to establish the optimal design parameters of a PAV and evaluate the state-of-the-art of these models.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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