The Review of scientific instruments | 2021

Development and preliminary test of a space-resolved vacuum-ultraviolet spectroscopy in EAST.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The impurity radiation from the divertor region of the EAST tokamak is dominantly in the wavelength range of vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) due to the elevated edge electron temperature. A space-resolved VUV spectroscopy is developed to measure impurity radiation in the divertor region. An eagle-type VUV spectrometer with a focal length of 1\xa0m is adopted in this system, equipped with a spherical grating and a charged-coupled device (CCD) detector. The performance of the VUV spectrometer is preliminarily tested on a synchrotron radiation facility. The wavelength calibration is conducted near 65\xa0nm. It is found that the wavelength range observed by the CCD detector is about 11.07\xa0nm around the central wavelength of about 65\xa0nm. With a linear dispersion of 0.0053 nm/pixel, it is possible to measure the ion temperature lower than 20\xa0eV at the edge region by analyzing the Doppler broadening of a carbon line. These test results show that the performance of the VUV spectrometer is capable of measuring divertor radiation and analyzing the ion temperature of edge impurity ions.

Volume 92 4
Pages \n 043519\n
DOI 10.1063/5.0040643
Language English
Journal The Review of scientific instruments

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