H. D. Falter
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by H. D. Falter.
Nuclear Fusion | 2006
E. Speth; H. D. Falter; P. Franzen; U. Fantz; M. Bandyopadhyay; S. Christ; A. Encheva; M. Fröschle; D. Holtum; B. Heinemann; W. Kraus; A. Lorenz; C. Martens; P. McNeely; S. Obermayer; R. Riedl; R. Süss; A. Tanga; R. Wilhelm; D. Wünderlich
The development of a large-area RF source for negative hydrogen ions, an official EFDA task agreement, is aiming at demonstrating ITER-relevant ion source parameters. This implies a current density of 200?A?m?2 accelerated D? ions at a source filling pressure of ?0.3?Pa and an electron-to-ion ratio of ?1 from an extraction area similar to the positive-ion based sources at JET and ASDEX Upgrade and for pulse lengths of up to 1?h. The work is progressing along three lines in parallel: (i) optimization of current densities at low pressure and electron/ion ratio, utilizing small extraction areas (<0.01?m2) and short pulses (<6?s), in this parameter range the ITER requirements are met or even exceeded; (ii) investigation on extended extraction areas (<0.03?m2) and pulse lengths of up to 3600?s and (iii) investigation of a size-scaling on a half-size ITER plasma source. Three different test beds are being used to carry out these investigations in parallel. An extensive diagnostic and modelling programme accompanies the activities. The paper discusses the recent achievements and the status in these three areas of development.
Nuclear Fusion | 2009
U. Fantz; P. Franzen; W. Kraus; M. Berger; S. Christ-Koch; H. D. Falter; M. Fröschle; R. Gutser; B. Heinemann; C. Martens; P. McNeely; R. Riedl; E. Speth; A. Stäbler; D. Wünderlich
For heating and current drive the neutral beam injection (NBI) system for ITER requires a 1 MeV deuterium beam for up to 1 h pulse length. In order to inject the required 17 MW the large area source (1.9 m × 0.9 m) has to deliver 40 A of negative ion current at the specified source pressure of 0.3 Pa. In 2007, the IPP RF driven negative hydrogen ion source was chosen by the ITER board as the new reference source for the ITER NBI system due to, in principle, its maintenance free operation and the progress in the RF source development. The performance analysis of the IPP RF sources is strongly supported by an extensive diagnostic program and modelling of the source and beam extraction. The control of the plasma chemistry and the processes in the plasma region near the extraction system are the most critical topics for source optimization both for long pulse operation as well as for the source homogeneity. The long pulse stability has been demonstrated at the test facility MANITU which is now operating routinely at stable pulses of up to 10 min with parameters near the ITER requirements. A quite uniform plasma illumination of a large area source (0.8 m × 0.8 m) has been demonstrated at the ion source test facility RADI. The new test facility ELISE presently planned at IPP is being designed for long pulse plasma operation and short pulse, but large-scale extraction from a half-size ITER source which is an important intermediate step towards ITER NBI.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006
U. Fantz; H. D. Falter; P. Franzen; E. Speth; R.S. Hemsworth; D. Boilson; A. Krylov
The powerful diagnostic tool of optical emission spectroscopy is used to measure the plasma parameters in negative hydrogen ion sources based on the surface mechanism. Results for electron temperature, electron density, atomic-to-molecular hydrogen density ratio, and gas temperature are presented for two types of sources, a rf source and an arc source, which are currently under development for a neutral beam heating system of ITER. The amount of cesium in the plasma volume is obtained from cesium radiation: the Cs neutral density is five to ten orders of magnitude lower than the hydrogen density and the Cs ion density is two to three orders of magnitude lower than the electron density in front of the grid. It is shown that monitoring of cesium lines is very useful for monitoring the cesium balance in the source. From a line-ratio method negative ion densities are determined. In a well-conditioned source the negative ion density is of the same order of magnitude as the electron density and correlates with ...
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008
U. Fantz; P. Franzen; W. Kraus; H. D. Falter; M. Berger; S. Christ-Koch; M. Fröschle; R. Gutser; B. Heinemann; C. Martens; P. McNeely; R. Riedl; E. Speth; D. Wünderlich
The international fusion experiment ITER requires for the plasma heating and current drive a neutral beam injection system based on negative hydrogen ion sources at 0.3 Pa. The ion source must deliver a current of 40 A D(-) for up to 1 h with an accelerated current density of 200 Am/(2) and a ratio of coextracted electrons to ions below 1. The extraction area is 0.2 m(2) from an aperture array with an envelope of 1.5 x 0.6 m(2). A high power rf-driven negative ion source has been successfully developed at the Max-Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (IPP) at three test facilities in parallel. Current densities of 330 and 230 Am/(2) have been achieved for hydrogen and deuterium, respectively, at a pressure of 0.3 Pa and an electron/ion ratio below 1 for a small extraction area (0.007 m(2)) and short pulses (<4 s). In the long pulse experiment, equipped with an extraction area of 0.02 m(2), the pulse length has been extended to 3600 s. A large rf source, with the width and half the height of the ITER source but without extraction system, is intended to demonstrate the size scaling and plasma homogeneity of rf ion sources. The source operates routinely now. First results on plasma homogeneity obtained from optical emission spectroscopy and Langmuir probes are very promising. Based on the success of the IPP development program, the high power rf-driven negative ion source has been chosen recently for the ITER beam systems in the ITER design review process.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2008
W. Kraus; H. D. Falter; U. Fantz; P. Franzen; B. Heinemann; P. McNeely; R. Riedl; E. Speth
IPP Garching is heavily involved in the development of the rf driven H(-)/D(-) ion source for the ITER NBI. After the successful demonstration of the required physical parameters, the experimental conditions have been extended to long pulses and large area beam extraction. This paper contains descriptions of the source and power supply modifications necessitated for long pulses as well as the latest results including the first 1 h pulse. Suppression of the coextracted electron current is a key issue. Experiments with potential control, different magnetic filter fields, and cesium handling to suppress the electrons and stabilize the currents are also reported.
Review of Scientific Instruments | 2006
P. McNeely; H. D. Falter; U. Fantz; P. Franzen; M. Fröschle; B. Heinemann; W. Kraus; C. Martens; R. Riedl; E. Speth
The development at IPP of a large-area rf source for negative hydrogen ions, an official EFDA task agreement, aims to demonstrate ITER-relevant source parameters. This implies a current density of 20mAcm−2 accelerated D− at a source-filling pressure of <0.3Pa, an electron to ion ratio of <1, and for pulse lengths of up to 1h. The principle suitability concerning current density, pressure, and electron content has been demonstrated with the test facility Bavarian Test Machine for Negative Ions but with only small extraction area (70cm2) and for pulse length of <6s. The further development concentrates now on long pulse operation at the test stand Multi-Ampere Negative Ion Test Unit (MANITU), which became operational this spring. For source size extension from 70to1000cm2 MANITU and a third test facility, currently under development, called RADI will be used. This article will report on the latest results of the work in progress. A critical issue for ITER is reliable source operation at high current densiti...
FOURTH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON NEGATIVE IONS, BEAMS AND SOURCES (NIBS 2014) | 2015
B. Heinemann; M. Fröschle; H. D. Falter; U. Fantz; P. Franzen; W. Kraus; R. Nocentini; R. Riedl; B. Ruf
The development of a radio frequency (RF) driven source for negative hydrogen ions for the neutral beam heating devices of fusion experiments has been successfully carried out at IPP since 1996 on the test facility BATMAN. The required ITER parameters have been achieved with the prototype source consisting of a cylindrical driver on the back side of a racetrack like expansion chamber. The extraction system, called “Large Area Grid” (LAG) was derived from a positive ion accelerator from ASDEX Upgrade (AUG) using its aperture size (o 8 mm) and pattern but replacing the first two electrodes and masking down the extraction area to 70 cm2. BATMAN is a well diagnosed and highly flexible test facility which will be kept operational in parallel to the half size ITER source test facility ELISE for further developments to improve the RF efficiency and the beam properties. It is therefore planned to upgrade BATMAN with a new ITER-like grid system (ILG) representing almost one ITER beamlet group, namely 5 × 14 apertu...
Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 1992
F. Marcus; J. M. Adams; D. V. Bartlett; V. Bhatnagar; A. J. Bickley; M Bures; D. J. Campbell; C. D. Challis; J. Christiansen; S Conroy; J. G. Cordey; W Core; S Corti; G. Cottrell; H. de Esch; L de Kock; T. Elevant; L. G. Eriksson; H. D. Falter; R. Giannella; R. D. Gill; A. Gondhalekar; N. A. Gottardi; R Hemsworth; J. Jacquinot; O. N. Jarvis; T. T. C. Jones; R. König; P. Lomas; M. Loughlin
Preliminary experiments were carried out in the Joint European Torus (JET) using 120 keV helium (He) neutral beam injection (NBI). Injected power levels up to 5 MW with 3He and 7 MW with 4He, lasting up to 3 s were reached. The 3 s helium NBI produced efficient ion heating and similar global and local energy confinements to those obtained with deuterium (D) NBI, in both limiter and X-point plasma geometries, in L-mode and H-mode plasma regimes. The elimination of beam-plasma and beam-beam fusion reactions by replacing D NBI with He NBI extended the range for measuring ion temperatures with the JET neutron profile monitor and neutron spectrometers.
PRODUCTION AND NEUTRALIZATION OF NEGATIVE IONS AND BEAMS: 11th International Symposium on the Production and Neutralization of Negative Ions and Beams | 2007
W. Kraus; P. McNeely; M. Berger; S. Christ-Koch; H. D. Falter; U. Fantz; P. Franzen; M. Fröschle; B. Heinemann; Stephan Leyer; R. Riedl; E. Speth; D. Wünderlich
IPP Garching is heavily involved in the development of an ion source for Neutral Beam Heating of the ITER Tokamak. RF driven ion sources have been successfully developed and are in operation on the ASDEX‐Upgrade Tokamak for positive ion based NBH by the NB Heating group at IPP Garching. Building on this experience a RF driven H− ion source has been under development at IPP Garching as an alternative to the ITER reference design ion source. The number of test beds devoted to source development for ITER has increased from one (BATMAN) by the addition of two test beds (MANITU, RADI). This paper contains descriptions of the three test beds. Results on diagnostic development using laser photodetachment and cavity ringdown spectroscopy are given for BATMAN. The latest results for long pulse development on MANITU are presented including the to date longest pulse (600 s). As well, details of source modifications necessitated for pulses in excess of 100 s are given. The newest test bed RADI is still being commissi...
symposium on fusion technology | 2005
P. Franzen; H. D. Falter; E. Speth; W. Kraus; M. Bandyopadhyay; A. Encheva; U. Fantz; T. Franke; B. Heinemann; D. Holtum; C. Martens; P. McNeely; R. Riedl; A. Tanga; R. Wilhelm