Nuclear Fusion (Jan 2024)

Conceptual design of a modular EC heating system for EU-DEMO

  • Alessandro Bruschi,
  • Jean-Philippe Hogge,
  • John Jelonnek,
  • Dirk Strauss,
  • Chuanren Wu,
  • Gaetano Aiello,
  • Kostas Avramidis,
  • Benedetta Baiocchi,
  • Daniel Birlan,
  • René Chavan,
  • Ioannis Chelis,
  • Arnaud Clement,
  • Aldo Collaku,
  • Fabien Crisinel,
  • Rosa Difonzo,
  • Benjamin Ell,
  • Francesco Fanale,
  • Pierluigi Fanelli,
  • Lorenzo Figini,
  • Eleonora Gajetti,
  • Gerd Gantenbein,
  • Saul Garavaglia,
  • Timothy P. Goodman,
  • Stefan Illy,
  • Zisis Ioannidis,
  • Jambo Jin,
  • George Latsas,
  • Cinta L. Marraco Borderas,
  • Stefan Marsen,
  • Alessandro Moro,
  • Marc Noël,
  • Dimitrios Peponis,
  • Tonio Pinna,
  • Paola Platania,
  • Natale Rispoli,
  • Tobias Ruess,
  • Tomasz Rzesnicki,
  • Alessandra Salvitti,
  • Laura Savoldi,
  • Theo Scherer,
  • Sabine Schreck,
  • Alessandro Simonetto,
  • Peter Spaeh,
  • Sebastian Stanculovic,
  • Torsten Stange,
  • Manfred Thumm,
  • Ioannis Tigelis,
  • Christos Tsironis,
  • Dietmar Wagner,
  • Anastasia Xydou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1741-4326/ad66e3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64, no. 10
p. 106003

Abstract

Read online

The European DEMO (EU-DEMO) reactor studies within EUROfusion aim to develop a fusion power plant concept. The large tokamak device needs an auxiliary heating power which, at the present stage, is provided by the Electron Cyclotron (EC) heating system with up to 130 MW foreseen to reach different regions of plasma for heating, suppression of instabilities and the possibility to support ramp-up and ramp-down phases. The present conceptual design of the system is based on 2 MW coaxial-cavity gyrotron sources, a transmission line (TL) using both circular corrugated waveguides and quasi-optical evacuated multi-beam TLs, and mirror antennas located in the Equatorial Port. In order to create a modular system, the sources are grouped in ‘clusters’, whose powers are combined in the quasi-optical TL, up to the tokamak building, where they are split and routed as single waveguides. In the launcher, they are combined together again on the launching mirrors, to save space for the apertures in the Breeding Blanket. The present EC heating system has a certain flexibility to adapt to changing design guidelines. The development status of the system is presented.

Keywords