SST-1status & plans

0Citations
Citations of this article
6Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Steady State Tokamak (SST-1) is currently being refurbished in a mission mode at the Institute for Plasma Research with an ultimate objective of producing the first plasma in early 2012. Since Jan 2009, under the SST-1 Mission mandate, a broad spectrum of refurbishment activities have been initiated and pursued on several subsystems of SST-1. Developing sub nano-ohm leak tight joints in the magnet winding packs, developing single phased LN2 cooled thermal shields, developing supercritical helium cooled 5 K thermal shields for magnet cases, insurance of thermal and electrical isolations between various sub-systems of SST-1, testing of each of the SST-1 Toroidal Field (TF) magnets in cold with nominal currents, testing each of the modules and octants of SST-1 machine shell in representative experimentally simulated scenarios, augmentation and reliability establishment of the SST-1 vacuum vessel baking system, time synchronizations amongst various heterogeneous subsystems of SST-1, large data storage scenarios, integrated engineering testing of the first phase of the plasma diagnostics etc are some of the major refurbishment activities. Presently, the SST-1 device integration is in full swing. The cold test of the assembled SST-1 TF and PF magnets are due to begin from Dec 2011. Following the successful testing of the SST-1 superconducting magnet system and engineering validations of the machine shell, the first plasmas will be attempted in SST-1. The first plasma will be ∼ 100 kA limiter assisted with the available volt-sec and could possibly be assisted by ECCD/LHCD. © 2011 IEEE.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Pradhan, S., Sharma, A. N., Tanna, V. L., Khan, Z., Prasad, U., Raval, D. C., … Patel, H. (2011). SST-1status & plans. In Proceedings - Symposium on Fusion Engineering. https://doi.org/10.1109/SOFE.2011.6052353

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free