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research article

Escaping alpha-particle monitor for burning plasmas

Kiptily, V. G.
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Shevelev, A. E.
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Goloborodko, V
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August 1, 2018
Nuclear Fusion

This paper presents a diagnostic system, gamma-ray alpha-particle monitor (GRAM), for continuous monitoring of deuterium-tritium fusion alpha-particles in the MeV energy range escaped from the plasma to the first wall. The diagnostic is based on the detection of gamma-rays produced in nuclear reactions. The reactions Be-9(alpha,eta,gamma)C-12 and B-10(alpha,p,gamma)C-13 have been selected. For that purpose, Be- or B-10-target is placed on the first wall, where the alphas are expected to be mostly lost. Striking the target, the lost alphas generate specific gamma-rays, if their energy E-alpha > 1.5 MeV. To measure this gamma-ray emission, the target should be in the field of view of a collimated detector, which is protected from neutrons and background gammas. The calibrated detector could deliver absolute values of the lost alpha-particle flux with a temporal resolution depending on intensity of losses. A high-performance gamma-ray spectrometer with a novel architecture, GRITER, is proposed to be used in GRAM. It consists of a stack of the optically isolated high-Z fast scintillators with independent signal readout. GRITER is supposed to be operated at count-rates substantially exceeding the capability of a single crystal detector of the same size. The GRAM diagnostic system consists of two identical spectrometers, which measure both gamma-rays due to alpha-particle loss and gamma-ray background ensuring reliable data in a harsh reactor environment. GRAM could be tested during the non-DT plasma operation monitoring lost DD fusion products, neutral beam heating D-ions (E-D > 0.5 MeV) and ICRF accelerated H- and He-3-ions through the detection of gamma-rays resulting from nuclear reactions. The use of GRAM on JET and ITER, including events with extremely high loss rates, is discussed.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1088/1741-4326/aab676
Web of Science ID

WOS:000436930000006

Author(s)
Kiptily, V. G.
Shevelev, A. E.
Goloborodko, V
Kocan, M.
Veshchev, E.
Craciunescu, T.
Khilkevitch, E. M.
Lengar, I
Polunovsky, I. A.
Schoepf, K.
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Date Issued

2018-08-01

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd

Published in
Nuclear Fusion
Volume

58

Issue

8

Article Number

082009

Subjects

Physics, Fluids & Plasmas

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Physics

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fusion

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tokamak

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alpha-particles

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diagnostics

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gamma-rays

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gamma-ray diagnostics

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fast-ion loss

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

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Available on Infoscience
September 20, 2019
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/161379
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