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Dive into the research topics where I.N. Sviatoslavsky is active.

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Featured researches published by I.N. Sviatoslavsky.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 1997

Overview of the ARIES-RS reversed-shear tokamak power plant study

F. Najmabadi; C.G. Bathke; M.C. Billone; James P. Blanchard; Leslie Bromberg; Edward Chin; Fredrick R Cole; Jeffrey A. Crowell; D.A. Ehst; L. El-Guebaly; J. Stephen Herring; T.Q. Hua; Stephen C. Jardin; Charles Kessel; H.Y. Khater; V.Dennis Lee; S. Malang; T.K. Mau; R.L. Miller; E.A. Mogahed; Thomas W. Petrie; Elmer E Reis; J.H. Schultz; M. Sidorov; D. Steiner; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; D.K. Sze; Robert Thayer; M. S. Tillack; Peter H. Titus

The ARIES-RS tokamak is a conceptual, D‐T-burning 1000 MWe power plant. As with earlier ARIES design studies, the final design of ARIES-RS was obtained in a self-consistent manner using the best available physics and engineering models. Detailed analyses of individual systems together with system interfaces and interactions were incorporated into the ARIES systems code in order to assure self-consistency and to optimize towards the lowest cost system. The ARIES-RS design operates with a reversed-shear plasma and employs a moderate aspect ratio (A4.0). The plasma current is relatively low (Ip11.32 MA) and bootstrap current fraction is high ( fBC 0.88). Consequently, the auxiliary power required for RF current drive is relatively low ( 80 MW). At the same time, the average


symposium on fusion technology | 2001

High performance blanket for ARIES-AT power plant

A.R. Raffray; L. El-Guebaly; S Gordeev; S. Malang; E.A. Mogahed; F. Najmabadi; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; D.K. Sze; M. S. Tillack; X. R. Wang

The ARIES-AT blanket has been developed with the overall objective of achieving high performance while maintaining attractive safety features, simple design geometry, credible maintenance and fabrication processes, and reasonable design margins as an indication of reliability. The design is based on Pb–17Li as breeder and coolant and SiCf/SiC composite as structural material. This paper summarizes the results of the design study of this blanket.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2003

Fusion power core engineering for the ARIES-ST power plant

M. S. Tillack; X. R. Wang; J. Pulsifer; S. Malang; D.K. Sze; M.C. Billone; I.N. Sviatoslavsky

Abstract ARIES-ST is a 1000 MWe fusion power plant based on a low aspect ratio ‘spherical torus’ (ST) plasma. The ARIES-ST power core was designed to accommodate the unique features of an ST power plant, to meet the top-level requirements of an attractive fusion energy source, and to minimize extrapolation from the fusion technology database under development throughout the world. The result is an advanced helium-cooled ferritic steel blanket with flowing PbLi breeder and tungsten plasma-interactive components. Design improvements, such as the use of SiC inserts in the blanket to extend the outlet coolant temperature range were explored and the results are reported here. In the final design point, the power and particle loads found in ARIES-ST are relatively similar to other advanced tokamak power plants (e.g. ARIES-RS [Fusion Eng. Des. 38 (1997) 3; Fusion Eng. Des. 38 (1997) 87]) such that exotic technologies were not required in order to satisfy all of the design criteria. Najmabadi and the ARIES Team [Fusion Eng. Des. (this issue)] provide an overview of ARIES-ST design. In this article, the details of the power core design are presented together with analysis of the thermal–hydraulic, thermomechanical and materials behavior of in-vessel components. Detailed engineering analysis of ARIES-ST TF and PF systems, nuclear analysis, and safety are given in the companion papers [4] , [5] , [6] , [7] .


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2000

ALPS–advanced limiter-divertor plasma-facing systems

R.F. Mattas; Jean Paul Allain; R. Bastasz; J.N. Brooks; Todd Evans; A. Hassanein; S Luckhardt; Kathryn A. McCarthy; P.K. Mioduszewski; R. Maingi; E.A. Mogahed; Ralph W. Moir; Sergei Molokov; N. Morely; R.E. Nygren; Thomas D. Rognlien; Claude B. Reed; David N. Ruzic; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; D.K. Sze; M. S. Tillack; M. Ulrickson; P. M. Wade; R. Wooley; Clement Wong

The advanced limiter-divertor plasma-facing systems (ALPS) program was initiated in order to evaluate the potential for improved performance and lifetime for plasma-facing systems. The main goal of the program is to demonstrate the advantages of advanced limiter:divertor systems over conventional systems in terms of power density capability, component lifetime, and power conversion efficiency, while providing for safe operation and minimizing impurity concerns for the plasma. Most of the work to date has been applied to free surface liquids. A multi-disciplinary team from several institutions has been organized to address the key issues associated with these systems. The main performance goals for advanced limiters and divertors are a peak heat flux of \ 50 MW:m 2 , elimination of a lifetime limit for erosion, and the ability to extract useful heat at high power conversion efficiency (40%). The evaluation of various options is being conducted through a combination of laboratory experiments, www.elsevier.com:locate:fusengdes


Fusion Technology | 1989

Apollo - An advanced fuel fusion power reactor for the 21st century

G.L. Kulcinski; G. A. Emmert; James P. Blanchard; L. El-Guebaly; H.Y. Khater; John F. Santarius; M.E. Sawan; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; L.J. Wittenberg; R.J. Witt

A preconceptual design of a tokamak reactor fueled by a D-He-3 plasma is presented. A low aspect ratio (A=2-4) device is studied here but high aspect ratio devices (A > 6) may also be quite attractive. The Apollo D-He-3 tokamak capitalizes on recent advances in high field magnets (20 T) and utilizes rectennas to convert the synchrotron radiation directly to electricity. The overall efficiency ranges from 37 to 52% depending on whether the bremsstrahlung energy is utilized. The low neutron wall loading (0.1 MW/m/sup 2/) allows a permanent first wall to be designed and the low nuclear decay heat enables the reactor to be classed as inherently safe. The cost of electricity from Apollo is > 40% lower than electricity from a similar sized DT reactor.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 1998

The ARIES-RS power core—recent development in Li/V designs

D.K. Sze; M.C. Billone; T.Q. Hua; M. S. Tillack; F. Najmabadi; X. R. Wang; S. Malang; L. El-Guebaly; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; James P. Blanchard; Jeffrey A. Crowell; H.Y. Khater; E.A. Mogahed; Lester M. Waganer; Dennis Lee; Dick Cole

The ARIES-RS fusion power plant design study is based on reversed-shear (RS) physics with a Li/V (lithium breeder and vanadium structure) blanket. The reversed-shear discharge has been documented in many large tokamak experiments. The plasma in the RS mode has a high beta, low current, and low current drive requirement. Therefore, it is an attractive physics regime for a fusion power plant. The blanket system based on Li/V has high temperature operating capability, good tritium breeding, excellent high heat flux removal capability, long structural life time, low activation, low after heat and good safety characteristics. For these reasons, the ARIES-RS reactor study selected Li/V as the reference blanket. The combination of attractive physics and attractive blanket engineering is expected to result in a superior power plant design. This paper summarizes the power core design of the ARIES-RS power plant study.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 1998

Study of a spherical tokamak based volumetric neutron source

E.T. Cheng; Y.K.Martin Peng; Ralph Cerbone; P.J. Fogarty; J. Galambos; E.A. Mogahed; B. Nelson; Massoud T. Simnad; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; M. S. Tillack

Abstract With the worldwide development of fusion power focusing on the design of the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER), developmental strategies for the demonstration fusion power plant (DEMO) are being discussed. A relatively prudent strategy is to construct and operate a small deuterium–tritium fuelled volumetric neutron source (VNS) in parallel with ITER. The VNS is to provide, over a period less than 20 years, a relatively high fusion neutron fluence of 6 MW year m−2 and wall loading of 1 MW m−2 or more, over an accessible blanket test area of more than 10 m2. Such a VNS would complement ITER in testing, developing, and qualifying nuclear technology components, materials, and their combinations for DEMO and future commercial power plants. The effort of this study has established the potential of the spherical tokamak as a credible VNS concept that satisfies the above requirements.


Nuclear Fusion | 1989

Possibilities for breakeven and ignition of D-3He fusion fuel in a near term tokamak

G. A. Emmert; L. El-Guebaly; G.L. Kulcinski; John F. Santarius; J.E. Scharer; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; P.L. Walstrom; L.J. Wittenberg; R. Klingelhöfer

The feasibility of D-3He reactor plasma conditions in a tokamak of the NET/INTOR class is investigated. It is found that, depending on the energy confinement scaling law, energy breakeven can be achieved in NET without significant modification of its design. Significant improvement in Q (ratio of fusion power to injected power) can be achieved by removing the tritium producing blanket and replacing the inboard neutron shield by a thinner shield optimized for the neutron spectrum in D-3He; this allows the plasma major radius and aspect ratio to be reduced and higher beta and Q-values (up to about 3) to be achieved. The implications of D-3He operation for neutron shielding, the heat loads on the first wall and the divertor as well as plasma refuelling are considered.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 1997

ARIES-RS divertor system selection and analysis

C.P.C. Wong; E Chin; Thomas W. Petrie; E.E. Reis; M. S. Tillack; X. R. Wang; I.N. Sviatoslavsky; S. Malang; D.K. Sze

The ARIES-RS divertor system is selected and analyzed. A radiative divertor approach using Ne as the radiator is chosen to reduce the maximum heat flux to B 6M W m 2 . A 2 mm W layer is used to withstand surface erosion allowing a design life close to 3 full-power-years. This W coating on the V-alloy structure is castellated to meet structural design limits. A detailed description of the calculated heat flux distribution, thermal-hydraulics, structural analysis, fabrication methods and vacuum system design are presented. An innovative design using adjustable bolts is utilized to support the divertor plates, withstand disruption loads and allow adjustment of alignment between plates. With the exception of the concentration of Ne at the divertor, it is found that this divertor system design can satisfy all the design criteria and most of the functional requirements specified by the project.


Fusion Technology | 1989

Overview of the LIBRA light ion beam fusion conceptual design

Gregory A. Moses; G.L. Kulcinski; D. Bruggink; R.L. Engelstad; E.G. Lovell; J. J. MacFarlane; Z. Musicki; Robert R. Peterson; M.E. Sawan; I.N. Sviatoslavsky

The LIBRA light ion beam fusion commercial reactor study is a self-consistent conceptual design of a 330 MWe power plant with an accompanying economic analysis. Fusion targets are imploded by 4 MJ shaped pulses of 30 MeV Li ions at a rate of 3 Hz. The target gain is 80, leading to a yield of 320 MJ. The high intensity part of the ion plate is delivered by 16 diodes through 16 separate z-pinch plasma channels formed in 100 torr of helium with trace amounts of lithium. The blanket is an array of porous flexible silicon carbide tubes with Li/sub 17/Pb/sub 83/ flowing downward through them. These tubes (INPORT units) shield the target chamber wall from both neutron damage and the shock overpressure of the target explosion. The target chamber is self-pumped by the target explosion generated overpressure into a surge tank partially filled with Li/sub 17/Pb/sub 83/ that surrounds the target chamber. This scheme refreshes the chamber at the desired 3 Hz frequency without excessive pumping demands. The blanket multiplication is 1.2 and the tritium breeding ratio is 1.4. The direct capital cost of LIBRA is estimated to be

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M.E. Sawan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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E.A. Mogahed

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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G.L. Kulcinski

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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L.J. Wittenberg

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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L. El-Guebaly

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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H.Y. Khater

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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D.K. Sze

Argonne National Laboratory

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James P. Blanchard

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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M. S. Tillack

University of California

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X. R. Wang

University of California

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