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Dive into the research topics where Christian Bernt Haakonsen is active.

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Featured researches published by Christian Bernt Haakonsen.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2015

ARC: A compact, high-field, fusion nuclear science facility and demonstration power plant with demountable magnets

Brandon Sorbom; Justin Ball; Timothy R. Palmer; Franco J. Mangiarotti; Jennifer Sierchio; P.T. Bonoli; Cale Kasten; Derek Sutherland; Harold Barnard; Christian Bernt Haakonsen; Jonathan Yanming Goh; C. Sung; D.G. Whyte

The affordable, robust, compact (ARC) reactor is the product of a conceptual design study aimed at reducing the size, cost, and complexity of a combined fusion nuclear science facility (FNSF) and demonstration fusion Pilot power plant. ARC is a ∼200–250 MWe tokamak reactor with a major radius of 3.3 m, a minor radius of 1.1 m, and an on-axis magnetic field of 9.2 T. ARC has rare earth barium copper oxide (REBCO) superconducting toroidal field coils, which have joints to enable disassembly. This allows the vacuum vessel to be replaced quickly, mitigating first wall survivability concerns, and permits a single device to test many vacuum vessel designs and divertor materials. The design point has a plasma fusion gain of Qp ≈ 13.6, yet is fully non-inductive, with a modest bootstrap fraction of only ∼63%. Thus ARC offers a high power gain with relatively large external control of the current profile. This highly attractive combination is enabled by the ∼23 T peak field on coil achievable with newly available REBCO superconductor technology. External current drive is provided by two innovative inboard RF launchers using 25 MW of lower hybrid and 13.6 MW of ion cyclotron fast wave power. The resulting efficient current drive provides a robust, steady state core plasma far from disruptive limits. ARC uses an all-liquid blanket, consisting of low pressure, slowly flowing fluorine lithium beryllium (FLiBe) molten salt. The liquid blanket is low-risk technology and provides effective neutron moderation and shielding, excellent heat removal, and a tritium breeding ratio ≥ 1.1. The large temperature range over which FLiBe is liquid permits an output blanket temperature of 900 K, single phase fluid cooling, and a high efficiency helium Brayton cycle, which allows for net electricity generation when operating ARC as a Pilot power plant.


Physics of Plasmas | 2013

Collisional effects on nonlinear ion drag force for small grains

Ian H. Hutchinson; Christian Bernt Haakonsen

The ion drag force arising from plasma flow past an embedded spherical grain is calculated self-consistently and non-linearly using particle in cell codes, accounting for ion-neutral collisions. Using ion velocity distribution appropriate for ion drift driven by a force field gives wake potential and force greatly different from a shifted Maxwellian distribution, regardless of collisionality. The low-collisionality forces are shown to be consistent with estimates based upon cross-sections for scattering in a Yukawa (shielded) grain field, but only if non-linear shielding length is used. Finite collisionality initially enhances the drag force, but only by up to a factor of 2. Larger collisionality eventually reduces the drag force. In the collisional regime, the drift distribution gives larger drag than the shift distribution even at velocities where their collisionless drags are equal. Comprehensive practical analytic formulas for force that fit the calculations are provided.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Kinetic electron and ion instability of the lunar wake simulated at physical mass ratio

Christian Bernt Haakonsen; Ian H. Hutchinson; Chuteng Zhou

The solar wind wake behind the moon is studied with 1D electrostatic particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations using a physical ion to electron mass ratio (unlike prior investigations); the simulations also apply more generally to supersonic flow of dense magnetized plasma past non-magnetic objects. A hybrid electrostatic Boltzmann electron treatment is first used to investigate the ion stability in the absence of kinetic electron effects, showing that the ions are two-stream unstable for downstream wake distances (in lunar radii) greater than about three times the solar wind Mach number. Simulations with PIC electrons are then used to show that kinetic electron effects can lead to disruption of the ion beams at least three times closer to the moon than in the hybrid simulations. This disruption occurs as the result of a novel wake phenomenon: the non-linear growth of electron holes spawned from a narrow dimple in the electron velocity distribution. Most of the holes arising from the dimple are small and quickly...


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

Non-linear plasma wake growth of electron holes

Ian H. Hutchinson; Christian Bernt Haakonsen; Chuteng Zhou

An objects wake in a plasma with small Debye length that drifts across the magnetic field is subject to electrostatic electron instabilities. Such situations include, for example, the moon in the solar wind and probes in magnetized laboratory plasmas. The instability drive mechanism can equivalently be considered drift down the potential-energy gradient or drift up the density-gradient. The gradients arise because the plasma wake has a region of depressed density and electrostatic potential into which ions are attracted along the field. The non-linear consequences of the instability are analysed in this paper. At physical ratios of electron to ion mass, neither linear nor quasilinear treatment can explain the observation of large-amplitude perturbations that disrupt the ion streams well before they become ion-ion unstable. We show here, however, that electron holes, once formed, continue to grow, driven by the drift mechanism, and if they remain in the wake may reach a maximum non-linearly stable size, beyond which their uncontrolled growth disrupts the ions. The hole growth calculations provide a quantitative prediction of hole profile and size evolution. Hole growth appears to explain the observations of recent particle-in-cell simulations.


Physics of Plasmas | 2015

The electron forewake: Shadowing and drift-energization as flowing magnetized plasma encounters an obstacle

Christian Bernt Haakonsen; Ian H. Hutchinson

Flow of magnetized plasma past an obstacle creates a traditional wake, but also a forewake region arising from shadowing of electrons. The electron forewakes resulting from supersonic flows past insulating and floating-potential obstacles are explored with 2D electrostatic particle-in-cell simulations, using a physical ion to electron mass ratio. Drift-energization is discovered to give rise to modifications to the electron velocity-distribution, including a slope-reversal, providing a novel drive of forewake instability. The slope-reversal is present at certain locations in all the simulations, and appears to be quite robustly generated. Wings of enhanced electron density are observed in some of the simulations, also associated with drift-energization. In the simulations with a floating-potential obstacle, the specific potential structure behind that obstacle allows fast electrons to cross the wake, giving rise to a more traditional shadowing-driven two-stream instability. Fluctuations associated with such instability are observed in the simulations, but this instability-mechanism is expected to be more sensitive to the plasma parameters than that associated with the slope-reversal.


ieee symposium on fusion engineering | 2015

The engineering design of ARC: A compact, highfield, fusion nuclear science facility and demonstration power plant

Brandon Sorbom; Justin Ball; Timothy R. Palmer; Franco J. Mangiarotti; Jennifer Sierchio; P.T. Bonoli; Cale Kasten; Derek Sutherland; Harold Barnard; Christian Bernt Haakonsen; J. Goh; C. Sung; D.G. Whyte

The affordable, robust, compact (ARC) reactor conceptual design study aims to reduce the size, cost, and complexity of a combined fusion nuclear science facility (FNSF) and demonstration fusion pilot power plant. ARC is a 200 MWe tokamak reactor with a major radius of 3.3 m, a minor radius of 1.1 m, and an on-axis magnetic field of 9.2 T. ARC is designed to use rare earth barium copper oxide (REBCO), a type of high-temperature superconductor (HTS), for its toroidal field coils. The use of HTS technology offers many advantages over traditional superconductors when applied to tokamak designs. REBCO superconductors in particular have orders of magnitude higher critical current density than traditional superconductors such as Nb3Sn at local fields greater than 20 T, enabling much higher fields to be used in the tokamak. The large allowable temperature range (up to ~90 K) of HTS allows the use of coolants other than helium and makes possible the design of joints in the toroidal field coils. This allows the vacuum vessel to be replaced quickly, lowering first wall survivability concerns and reducing the cost and operational implications of vessel failure during the experimental phase of the reactor. External current drive for ARC is provided by two inboard (high-field side) RF launchers using 25 MW of lower hybrid and 13.6 MW of ion cyclotron fast wave power. The resulting efficient current drive provides a robust, steady state core plasma far from disruptive limits. ARC uses an all-liquid blanket, consisting of low pressure, slowly flowing fluorine lithium beryllium (FLiBe) molten salt. The liquid blanket is low-risk technology and provides effective neutron moderation and shielding, excellent heat removal, and a tritium breeding ratio ≥ 1.1. The large temperature range over which FLiBe is liquid permits blanket operation at ~900 K with single phase fluid cooling and a high-efficiency Brayton cycle, allowing for net electricity generation when operating ARC as a pilot power plant. When coupled with a demountable compact reactor design, the immersion blanket allows the vacuum vessel to be a replaceable component, eliminating the need for complex sector maintenance. The modular design of ARC allows a single machine to initially serve as an experiment and then transition to a demonstration commercial reactor.


DUSTY/COMPLEX PLASMAS: BASIC AND INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH: Sixth International Conference on the Physics of Dusty Plasmas | 2011

Ion Collection by a Sphere in a Drifting Collisional Plasma

Christian Bernt Haakonsen; Ian H. Hutchinson

SCEPTIC3D now includes charge‐exchange collisions, and is used to examine ion collection by a floating conducting sphere (small compared to the electron debye length) in the presence of a background neutral drift. The enhancement of ion collection at moderate collisionalities seen for the stationary case is weakened as the drift speed increases from the ion thermal speed to the ion sound speed, above which no enhancement is seen.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2012

An initial study of demountable high-temperature superconducting toroidal field magnets for the Vulcan tokamak conceptual design

Z.S. Hartwig; Christian Bernt Haakonsen; R.T. Mumgaard; Leslie Bromberg


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2012

Vulcan: A steady-state tokamak for reactor-relevant plasma–material interaction science

G.M. Olynyk; Z.S. Hartwig; D.G. Whyte; Harold Barnard; P.T. Bonoli; Leslie Bromberg; M.L. Garrett; Christian Bernt Haakonsen; R.T. Mumgaard; Y.A. Podpaly


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2012

Reactor similarity for plasma–material interactions in scaled-down tokamaks as the basis for the Vulcan conceptual design

D.G. Whyte; G.M. Olynyk; Harold Barnard; P.T. Bonoli; Leslie Bromberg; M.L. Garrett; Christian Bernt Haakonsen; Z.S. Hartwig; R.T. Mumgaard; Y.A. Podpaly

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Ian H. Hutchinson

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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D.G. Whyte

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Harold Barnard

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Chuteng Zhou

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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P.T. Bonoli

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Z.S. Hartwig

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Brandon Sorbom

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Jennifer Sierchio

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Leslie Bromberg

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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