Alvaro Marqueta
Fusion for Energy
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Featured researches published by Alvaro Marqueta.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
Y. Okumura; R. Gobin; J. Knaster; R. Heidinger; Juan Marcos Ayala; Benoit Bolzon; P. Cara; Nicolas Chauvin; Stéphane Chel; Dominique Gex; Francis Harrault; R. Ichimiya; A. Ihara; Y. Ikeda; Atsushi Kasugai; T. Kikuchi; T. Kitano; Masao Komata; K. Kondo; S. Maebara; Alvaro Marqueta; Shigeru O’hira; M. Perez; G. Phillips; G. Pruneri; K. Sakamoto; F. Scantamburlo; Franck Senée; K. Shinto; M. Sugimoto
The objective of linear IFMIF prototype accelerator is to demonstrate 125 mA/CW deuterium ion beam acceleration up to 9 MeV. The injector has been developed in CEA Saclay and already demonstrated 140 mA/100 keV deuterium beam [R. Gobin et al., Rev. Sci. Instrum. 85, 02A918 (2014)]. The injector was disassembled and delivered to the International Fusion Energy Research Center in Rokkasho, Japan. After reassembling the injector, commissioning has started in 2014. Up to now, 100 keV/120 mA/CW hydrogen and 100 keV/90 mA/CW deuterium ion beams have been produced stably from a 10 mm diameter extraction aperture with a low beam emittance of 0.21 π mm mrad (rms, normalized). Neutron production by D-D reaction up to 2.4 × 10(9) n/s has been observed in the deuterium operation.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
R. Gobin; Daniel Bogard; Benoit Bolzon; Gilles Bourdelle; Nicolas Chauvin; Stéphane Chel; Patrick Girardot; Adelino Gomes; Patrice Guiho; Francis Harrault; Denis Loiseau; Yves Lussignol; Nicolas Misiara; Arnaud Roger; Franck Senée; Matthieu Valette; P. Cara; Daniel Duglué; Dominique Gex; Y. Okumura; Juan Marcos Ayala; J. Knaster; Alvaro Marqueta; Atsushi Kasugai; Shigeru O’hira; K. Shinto; Hiroki Takahashi
The International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility (IFMIF) linear IFMIF prototype accelerator injector dedicated to high intensity deuteron beam production has been designed, built, and tested at CEA/Saclay between 2008 and 2012. After the completion of the acceptance tests at Saclay, the injector has been fully sent to Japan. The re-assembly of the injector has been performed between March and May 2014. Then after the check-out phase, the production of the first proton beam occurred in November 2014. Hydrogen and deuteron beam commissioning is now in progress after having proceeded with the final tests on the entire injector equipment including high power diagnostics. This article reports the different phases of the injector installation pointing out the safety and security needs, as well as the first beam production results in Japan and chopper tests. Detailed operation and commissioning results (with H(+) and D(+) 100 keV beams) are reported in a second article.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2016
K. Shinto; Franck Senée; Juan Marcos Ayala; Benoit Bolzon; Nicolas Chauvin; R. Gobin; R. Ichimiya; A. Ihara; Y. Ikeda; Atsushi Kasugai; T. Kitano; K. Kondo; Alvaro Marqueta; Y. Okumura; Hiroki Takahashi; Matthieu Valette
Ion species ratio of high current positive hydrogen/deuterium ion beams extracted from an electron-cyclotron-resonance ion source for International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility accelerator was measured by the Doppler shift Balmer-α line spectroscopy. The proton (H(+)) ratio at the middle of the low energy beam transport reached 80% at the hydrogen ion beam extraction of 100 keV/160 mA and the deuteron (D(+)) ratio reached 75% at the deuterium ion beam extraction of 100 keV/113 mA. It is found that the H(+) ratio measured by the spectroscopy gives lower than that derived from the phase-space diagram measured by an Allison scanner type emittance monitor. The H(+)/D(+) ratio estimated by the emittance monitor was more than 90% at those extraction currents.
7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016
Francesco Scantamburlo; Pierre-Yves Beauvais; Benoit Bolzon; Hervé Dzitko; Ryo Ichimiya; J. Knaster; Hitoshi Kobayashi; Alvaro Marqueta
IFMIF (International Fusion Material Irradiation Facility) will be a Li(d,xn) neutron source providing equivalent neutron spectrum of DT fusion reactions and comparable neutron flux of future commercial reactors. Such a facility is an essential step in world fusion roadmaps to qualify suitable structural materials capable of holding the unrivalled neutron irradiation inside the nuclear vessel of a fusion reactor. IFMIF, presently in its EVEDA (Engineering Validation and Engineering Design Activities) phase, is installing LIPAc (Linear IFMIF Prototype Accelerator) in Rokkasho (Japan), a 125mA CW 9 MeV deuteron beam as validating prototype of IFMIF accelerators. The MPS of LIPAc manages the interlocks for a fast beam stop during anomalous beam losses or other hazardous situations. High speed processing is essential to achieve MPS goals driven by investment protection principles. Beam losses may lead to severe damages by excessive thermal stresses, annealing or even burn/melting of materials. The assumptions to estimate the practical safe times for a fast beam shutdown during the accelerator operational life are here described. IFMIF AND LIPAC, ITS ACCELERATOR PROTOTYPE Fusion materials research has fuelled for decades the world endeavours towards high current linacs [1]. The required neutron flux >10 m·s with a broad peak at 14 MeV to simulate the irradiation conditions of the plasma facing components in a fusion reactor is obtainable through Li(d,xn) stripping reactions; however those fluxes demand deuteron currents in the 10 mA range in CW mode. The first world attempt of such conditions was framed by the Fusion Materials Irradiation Test Facility, FMIT, in the early 80s; with unexpected difficulties and lessons learnt in operating in CW mode [2]. The International Fusion Materials Irradiation Facility, IFMIF, consists of two deuteron accelerators at 125 mA in CW and 40 MeV impacting on a flowing lithium screen. It is since 2007, in its Engineering Validation and Engineering Design Activity phase, EVEDA, where the only remaining activity of its broad mandate (that has provided an engineering design [3] of the plant and, among many other technical challenges, validated the stable operation of its lithium loop [4] and its irradiation modules capable of housing above 1000 specimens and characterize structural materials simultaneously in twelve different irradiation capsules independently cooled [5]) is its Linear IFMIF Prototype Accelerator, LIPAc, presently under installation and commissioning in the International Fusion Energy Research Center (IFERC) in Rokkasho (Japan), by European and Japanese laboratories [6]. A full account of the validation activities under IFMIF/EVEDA has already been provided [7]. Collective phenomena driven by space charge forces become the main limitation on achieving high intensity beams. In low β regions, the beam outward radial Coulomb forces prevail over the inward radial Ampere ones, but they mutually cancel in the relativistic domain. Thus, space charge repulsive forces are stronger the lower the beam energy is. The successful operation of LIPAc, with its deuteron beam current of 125 mA in CW at 9 MeV as the output of the first planned cryomodule of IFMIF will validate the 40 MeV required for the Li(d,xn) source [1,8]. Figure 1: Above Comparison of IFMIF accelerators and LIPAc, their 1.125 MW beam average power prototype accelerator, matched up to the 1st SRF linac at 9 MeV. Below breakdown of the contribution for LIPAc. IONS INTERACTION WITH MATTER The physics of heavy ions with matter was first unravelled semi-classically by Bohr in 1913 based on his atomistic model (making use of the impact parameter between target nuclei and impacting particle) [9], and through relativistic quantum mechanics by Bethe in 1932 [10] (making use of the momentum transfer by the particle to the cloud of electrons) being both expressions for the stopping power − of the absorber identical for nonrelativistic ions ( ≪ 1), and with the ion only dependent variables its kinetic energy and charge. Among the different possible types of radiation, only ions show a fixed range; a mono-energetic beam of ions traversing matter loses its energy without any change in the number of particles, and eventually all are stopped reaching practically the same depth. The combination of the logarithmical dependence of the stopping power on the ions speed and their slowing Proceedings of IPAC2016, Busan, Korea WEPMR044 07 Accelerator Technology T33 Subsystems, Technology and Components, Other ISBN 978-3-95450-147-2 2373 C op yr ig ht
7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016
P. Cara; Nicolas Bazin; Beatriz Brañas Lasala; Stéphane Chel; Alberto Facco; Enrico Fagotti; R. Gobin; Roland Heidinger; David Jiménez-Rey; Atsushi Kasugai; Sakamoto Keishi; J. Knaster; Alvaro Marqueta; Jacques Marroncle; J. Molla; Purificación Méndez; S. Ohira; Y. Okumura; Andrea Pisent; Ivan Podadera; Bertrand Renard; K. Sakamoto
7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016
Benoit Bolzon; Juan Marcos Ayala; Pierre-Yves Beauvais; Luca Bellan; P. Cara; Nicolas Chauvin; Stéphane Chel; Michele Comunian; Hervé Dzitko; Enrico Fagotti; Dominique Gex; R. Gobin; Francesco Grespan; Francis Harrault; Roland Heidinger; Ryo Ichimiya; Akira Ihara; Y. Ikeda; Atsushi Kasugai; Takayuki Kikuchi; Toshihiko Kitano; J. Knaster; Masao Komata; Keitaro Kondo; S. Maebara; Alvaro Marqueta; Koichi Nishiyama; S. Ohira; Y. Okumura; Mario Perez
Nuclear materials and energy | 2018
Takahiro Shinya; Enrico Fagotti; M. Weber; Loris Antoniazzi; T. Akagi; L. Bellan; D. Bortolato; T. Ebisawa; Francesco Grespan; Yosuke Hirata; Ryo Ichimiya; K. Kasugai; Keitaro Kondo; Toshihiko Kitano; Igor Kirpitchev; Paolo Mereu; Purificación Méndez; C. de la Morena; S. Maebara; Maurizio Montis; A. Palmieri; Andrea Pisent; Giuseppe Pruneri; David Regidor; K. Sakamoto; Francesco Scantamburlo; M. Sugimoto; P. Cara; Dominique Gex; R. Heidinger
Fusion Engineering and Design | 2018
Koichi Nishiyama; J. Knaster; Y. Okumura; Alvaro Marqueta; Giuseppe Pruneri; Francesco Scantamburlo; K. Sakamoto; M. Sugimoto; Atsushi Kasugai; Yosuke Hirata; Keitaro Kondo; Y. Ikeda; S. Maebara; Ryo Ichimiya; Takahiro Shinya; Akira Ihara; Toshihiko Kitano; Pierre-Yves Beauvais; Raphaël Gobin; Benoit Bolzon
Nuclear materials and energy | 2018
Keitaro Kondo; Juan Marcos Ayala; Benoit Bolzon; P. Cara; Hervé Dzitko; Takashi Ebisawa; Enrico Fagotti; Dominique Gex; R. Heidinger; Yosuke Hirata; Ryo Ichimiya; Y. Ikeda; David Jimenez; Antti Jokinen; Atsushi Kasugai; Takayuki Kikuchi; J. Knaster; Masao Komata; S. Maebara; Alvaro Marqueta; Ivan Moya; Shinobu Nishimura; Shigeru O’hira; Y. Okumura; Mario Perez; G. Phillips; Ivan Podadera; Giuseppe Pruneri; K. Sakamoto; Francesco Scantamburlo
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science | 2018
Yosuke Hirata; Atsushi Kasugai; Koichi Nishiyama; Alvaro Marqueta