Simulation of the beamline thermal measurements to derive particle beam parameters in the ITER neutral beam test facility

Rev Sci Instrum. 2018 Oct;89(10):10J111. doi: 10.1063/1.5038952.

Abstract

Injection of high energy neutral beam particles will be used in the ITER experiment for plasma heating and current drive. In a ITER heating beam injector, a 40 MW electrostatically accelerated negative beam will be neutralised and filtered along the beamline, obtaining a nominal 16.5 MW neutral beam power to be injected in the tokamak plasma or intercepted during conditioning and commissioning. The beam will heat the actively cooled panels of the beamline components with up to 13 MW/m2 surface power density and 18 MW power. These extreme conditions require testing in a ITER full scale neutral beam test facility under construction in Padova where the temperature of the beamline components will be monitored by 610 embedded thermocouples for protection against critical conditions, for recognising beam conditioning, and for deriving beam parameters. Power density maps of the expected beam-component interactions are applied on a parametric non-linear finite element model to simulate fields of expected temperatures. Such thermal maps are analyzed to derive the beam parameters during operation: divergence of 3-7 mrad and misalignment of 0-3 mrad. The sensibility of the temperature measurements is discussed considering a minimum 10% fraction of the nominal beam power.