Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
273222 | Fusion Engineering and Design | 2007 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Engineering innovation is required to reduce cost and risk in fabrication for the Quasi-Poloidal Stellarator being developed to test key physics issues at very low plasma aspect ratio. Complex, highly accurate, stainless steel modular coil winding forms are cast and machined; conductor is wound directly onto the winding forms; a vacuum-tight cover is welded over each coil pack; the coils are vacuum pressure impregnated; the completed coils are installed in an external vacuum vessel. An internally cooled, compacted cable conductor that can be wound into complex 3-D shapes was developed. The largest and most complex of the winding forms has been cast using a patternless process (machined sand molds) and a high-temperature pour. The resulting casting required <1/10 the major weld repairs of similar sand castings using conventional patterns. As a result, QPS differs significantly in design and construction from other toroidal devices.
Keywords
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Authors
J.F. Lyon, B.E. Nelson, R.D. Benson, L.A. Berry, M.J. Cole, P.J. Fogarty, K.D. Freudenberg, P.L. Goranson, J.H. Harris, P. Heitzenroeder, A.D. Lumsdaine, M.A. Madhukar, G.H. Neilson, T.E. Shannon, D.A. Spong,