Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
272206 Fusion Engineering and Design 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Recently the ITER first wall (FW) design has been significantly upgraded to improve resistance to electromagnetic loads, to facilitate FW panel replacement and to increase FW ability to withstand higher (up to 5 MW/m2) surface heat loads. The latter has made it necessary to re-employ technologies previously developed for the now-abandoned port limiters. These solutions are related to the cooling channel with CuCrZr–SS bimetallic walls and hypervapotron type cooling regime, optimization of Be-tiles dimensions and Be to CuCrZr joining technique. A number of representative mockups were tested at high heat flux (HHF) at the Tsefey electron-beam facility to verify the thermo-hydraulic characteristics of the reference cooling channel design at moderate water flow velocities (V = 1–3 m/s, P = 2–3 MPa, T = 110–170 °C). The heat flux was gradually varied in the range of 1–10 MW/m2 until the critical heat flux was registered. The mockups of hypervapotron structure demonstrated the required cooling efficiency and critical heat flux margin (1.4) at a water velocity of ≥2 m/s. Dimensions of Be armor tiles strongly affect the thermo-mechanical stresses both in the CuCrZr cooling wall and at the Be–CuCrZr interface. Results of tile dimensions optimization (variable in the range 12 mm × 12 mm × 6 to 50 mm × 50 mm × 8 mm) obtained by the HHF (variable in the range of 3–8 MW/m2) experiments are presented and compared with analysis. It is shown that optimization of the tile geometry and joining technology provides the required cyclic fatigue lifetime of the reference FW design.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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