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Fusion Technology | 1990

Design Study for the Large Helical Device

A. Iiyoshi; Masami Fujiwara; O. Motojima; Nobuyoshi Ohyabu; K. Yamazaki

The Large Helical Device (LHD) is a Heliotron/torsatron-type superconducting helical confinement fusion device. The design study is described. The goal of the LHD is to demonstrate high energy confinement and high beta in a helical device, which are necessary steps toward a helical reactor system.


Physics of Plasmas | 1999

Initial physics achievements of large helical device experiments

O. Motojima; H. Yamada; A. Komori; N. Ohyabu; K. Kawahata; O. Kaneko; S. Masuzaki; A. Ejiri; M. Emoto; H. Funaba; M. Goto; K. Ida; H. Idei; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; S. Kado; S. Kubo; R. Kumazawa; T. Minami; J. Miyazawa; T. Morisaki; S. Morita; S. Murakami; S. Muto; T. Mutoh; Y. Nagayama; Y. Nakamura; H. Nakanishi; K. Narihara; K. Nishimura

The Large Helical Device (LHD) experiments [O. Motojima, et al., Proceedings, 16th Conference on Fusion Energy, Montreal, 1996 (International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1997), Vol. 3, p. 437] have started this year after a successful eight-year construction and test period of the fully superconducting facility. LHD investigates a variety of physics issues on large scale heliotron plasmas (R=3.9 m, a=0.6 m), which stimulates efforts to explore currentless and disruption-free steady plasmas under an optimized configuration. A magnetic field mapping has demonstrated the nested and healthy structure of magnetic surfaces, which indicates the successful completion of the physical design and the effectiveness of engineering quality control during the fabrication. Heating by 3 MW of neutral beam injection (NBI) has produced plasmas with a fusion triple product of 8×1018 keV m−3 s at a magnetic field of 1.5 T. An electron temperature of 1.5 keV and an ion temperature of 1.4 keV have been achieved. The maximum s...


Nuclear Fusion | 1994

The large helical device (LHD) helical divertor

N. Ohyabu; T. Watanabe; H. Ji; H. Akao; T. Ono; T. Kawamura; K. Yamazaki; Kenya Akaishi; N. Inoue; A. Komori; Y. Kubota; N. Noda; A. Sagara; H. Suzuki; O. Motojima; M. Fujiwara; A. Iiyoshi

The Large Helical Device (LHD) now under construction is a heliotron/torsatron device with a closed divertor system. The edge LHD magnetic structure has been studied in detail. A peculiar feature of the configuration is the existence of edge surface layers, a complicated three dimensional magnetic structure which does not, however, seem to hamper the expected divertor functions. Two divertor operational modes are being considered for the LHD experiment-high density, cold radiative divertor operation as a safe heat removal scheme and high temperature divertor plasma operation. In the latter operation, a divertor plasma with a temperature of a few keV, generated by efficient pumping, is expected to lead to a significant improvement in core plasma confinement. Conceptual designs of the LHD divertor components are under way


Fusion Engineering and Design | 1993

Physics and engineering design studies on the Large Helical Device

O. Motojima; K. Akaishi; K. Fujii; S. Fujiwaka; S. Imagawa; H. Ji; H. Kaneko; S. Kitagawa; Y. Kubota; K. Matsuoka; T. Mito; S. Morimoto; A. Nishimura; K. Nishimura; N. Noda; I. Ohtake; N. Ohyabu; S. Okamura; A. Sagara; M. Sakamoto; S. Satoh; K. Takahata; H. Tamura; Shugo Tanahashi; T. Tsuzuki; S. Yamada; H. Yamada; K. Yamazaki; N. Yanagi; H. Yonezu

Abstract The construction of the Large Helical Device (LHD) is progressing as a seven year project in Japan, which began in 1990. This year, necessary research and development programs are nearly reaching the final goal of the original schedule and we have started the construction of the basic parts of LHD. We report on the results of the physics and engineering design studies, and the recent status of the construction of LHD.


Nuclear Fusion | 2002

The divertor plasma characteristics in the Large Helical Device

S. Masuzaki; T. Morisaki; Nobuyoshi Ohyabu; A. Komori; H. Suzuki; N. Noda; Y. Kubota; R. Sakamoto; K. Narihara; K. Kawahata; Kenji Tanaka; T. Tokuzawa; S. Morita; M. Goto; M. Osakabe; T. Watanabe; Yutaka Matsumoto; O. Motojima

Divertor plasma characteristics in the Large Helical Device (LHD) have been investigated mainly by using Langmuir probes. The three-dimensional structure of the helical divertor, which is naturally produced in the heliotron-type magnetic configuration, is clearly seen in the measured particle and power deposition profiles on the divertor plates. These observations are consistent with the numerical results of field line tracing. The particle flux to the divertor plates increases almost linearly with the line averaged density. The high-recycling regime and divertor detachment, which are observed in tokamaks, have not been observed even during high density discharges with low input power. Both electron density and temperature decrease with increasing radius in the stochastic layer with open field lines, and at the divertor plate they become fairly low compared with those at the last closed flux surface. This means the reduction of pressure along the magnetic field lines occurs in the open field line region in LHD.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 1995

Blanket and divertor design for force free helical reactor (FFHR)

A. Sagara; O. Motojima; K.Y. Watanabe; S. Imagawa; H. Yamanishi; Osamu Mitarai; T. Satow; H. Tikaraishi

Abstract Conceptual design of blanket and divertor for a force free helical reactor (FFHR) is presented. The demonstration-relevant FFHR is a heliotron-type helical reactor having superconducting helical and poloidal coils based on the large helical device (LHD) which is now under construction in the National Institute for Fusion Science. The main feature of FFHR is force free configuration of helical coils, which allows us to simplify the coil supporting structure and to use high magnetic field instead of high plasma β. For the goal of a self-ignited D—T reactor of 3 GW thermal output, the design parameters for FFHR are investigated under the LHD scaling for energy confinement and density limit. In particular, to satisfy the reactor lifetime of 30 years, the engineering issues in FFHR are discussed by focusing on selection of structrual materials for 500 dpa, optimization of tritium breeding system with neutron multiplier, cooling with molten-salt Flibe and operation temperature in the blanket, radiation shielding to achieve a reduction of more than 5 orders of magnitude at superconducting coils, and steady state helium ash removal with an efficiency of around 30%.


Fusion Engineering and Design | 2000

Design and development of the Flibe blanket for helical-type fusion reactor FFHR

Akio Sagara; H. Yamanishi; S. Imagawa; Takeo Muroga; Tatsuhiko Uda; T. Noda; S. Takahashi; K. Fukumoto; Takuya Yamamoto; H. Matsui; Akira Kohyama; H. Hasizume; Saburo Toda; Akihiko Shimizu; Akihiro Suzuki; Y. Hosoya; Satoru Tanaka; T. Terai; D.K. Sze; O. Motojima

Blanket design is in progress in helical-type compact reactor FFHR-2. A localized blanket concept is proposed by selecting molten-salt Flibe as a self-cooling tritium breeder from the main reason of safety: low tritium solubility, low reactivity with air and water, low pressure operation, and low MHD resistance which is compatible with the high magnetic field design in force-free helical reactor (FFHR). Numerical results are presented on nuclear analyses using the MCNP-4B code, on thermal and stress analyses using the ABAQUS code, and heat exchange efficiency from Flibe to He. R&D programs on Flibe engineering are also in progress in material dipping-tests and in construction of molten salt loop. Preliminary results in these experiments are also presented.


Plasma Physics and Controlled Fusion | 2001

Configuration flexibility and extended regimes in Large Helical Device

H. Yamada; A. Komori; N. Ohyabu; O. Kaneko; K. Kawahata; K.Y. Watanabe; S. Sakakibara; S. Murakami; K. Ida; R. Sakamoto; Y. Liang; J. Miyazawa; Kenji Tanaka; Y. Narushima; S. Morita; S. Masuzaki; T. Morisaki; N. Ashikawa; L. R. Baylor; W.A. Cooper; M. Emoto; P.W. Fisher; H. Funaba; M. Goto; H. Idei; K. Ikeda; S. Inagaki; N. Inoue; M. Isobe; K. Khlopenkov

Recent experimental results in the Large Helical Device have indicated that a large pressure gradient can be formed beyond the stability criterion for the Mercier (high-n) mode. While the stability against an interchange mode is violated in the inward-shifted configuration due to an enhancement of the magnetic hill, the neoclassical transport and confinement of high-energy particle are, in contrast, improved by this inward shift. Mitigation of the unfavourable effects of MHD instability has led to a significant extension of the operational regime. Achievements of the stored energy of I MJ and the volume-averaged beta of 3% are representative results from this finding. A confinement enhancement factor above the international stellarator scaling ISS95 is also maintained around 1.5 towards a volume-averaged beta, (beta), of 3%. Configuration studies on confinement and MHD characteristics emphasize the superiority of the inward-shifted geometry to other geometries. The emergence of coherent modes appears to be consistent with the linear ideal MHD theory; however, the inward-shifted configuration has reduced heat transport in spite of a larger amplitude of magnetic fluctuation than the outward-shifted configuration. While neoclassical helical ripple transport becomes visible for the outward-shifted configuration in the collisionless regime, the inward-shifted configuration does not show any degradation of confinement deep in the collisionless regime (nu* < 0.1). The distinguished characteristics observed in the inward-shifted configuration help in creating a new perspective of MHD stability and related transport in net current-free plasmas. The first result of the pellet launching at different locations is also reported.


Fusion Science and Technology | 2010

Goal and Achievements of Large Helical Device Project

A. Komori; H. Yamada; S. Imagawa; O. Kaneko; K. Kawahata; K. Mutoh; N. Ohyabu; Y. Takeiri; K. Ida; T. Mito; Y. Nagayama; S. Sakakibara; R. Sakamoto; T. Shimozuma; K.Y. Watanabe; O. Motojima

Abstract The Large Helical Device (LHD) is a heliotron-type device employing large-scale superconducting magnets to enable advanced studies of net-current-free plasmas. The major goal of the LHD experiment is to demonstrate the high performance of helical plasmas in a reactor-relevant plasma regime. Engineering achievements and operational experience greatly contribute to the technological basis for a fusion energy reactor. Thorough exploration for scientific and systematic understanding of the physics in the LHD is an important step to a helical fusion reactor. In the 12 years since the initial operation, the physics database as well as operational experience has been accumulated, and the advantages of stable and steady-state features have been demonstrated by the combination of advanced engineering and the intrinsic physical advantages of helical systems in the LHD. The cryogenic system has been operated for 56 000 h in total without any serious trouble and routinely provides a confining magnetic field up to 2.96 T in steady state. The heating capability to date is 23 MW of neutral beam injection, 3 MW of ion cyclotron resonance frequency, and 2.5 MW of electron cyclotron resonance heating. Highlighted physical achievements are high beta (5.1%), high density (1.2 × 1021 m−3), and steady-state operation (3200 s with 490 kW).


Nuclear Fusion | 1988

Progress in stellarator/heliotron research: 1981?1986

B. A. Carreras; G. Grieger; J. H. Harris; J.L. Johnson; James F. Lyon; O. Motojima; F. Rau; H. Renner; J.A. Rome; K. Uo; Masahiro Wakatani; H. Wobig

Substantial progress was made during the period 1981-1986 in plasma parameters, physics understanding, and improvement of the stellarator/heliotron concept. Recent advances include (1) substantial achievements in higher plasma parameters and currentless plasma operation, (2) new theoretical results with respect to higher beta limits, second stability region, effect of a helical axis, effect of electric fields on transport, and reduction of secondary currents; and (3) improvements to the reactor concept. The key issues have been further refined, and the short-term direction of the program is clear; a number of new facilities that were designed to resolve these issues are about to come into operation or are in the final design stages. This report summarizes these advances.

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S. Masuzaki

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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A. Komori

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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A. Sagara

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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H. Funaba

Graduate University for Advanced Studies

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