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Surface thermocouples for measurement of pulsed heat flux in the divertor of the Alcator C-Mod tokamak
PROJECT TITLE :
Surface thermocouples for measurement of pulsed heat flux in the divertor of the Alcator C-Mod tokamak
ABSTRACT:
A novel set of thermocouple sensors has been developed to measure heat fluxes arriving at divertor surfaces in the Alcator C-Mod tokamak, a magnetic confinement fusion experiment. These sensors operate in direct contact with the divertor plasma, which deposits heat fluxes in excess of ∼10 MW/m2 over an ∼1 s pulse. Thermoelectric EMF signals are produced across a non-standard bimetallic junction: a 50 μm thick 74% tungsten-26% rhenium ribbon embedded in a 6.35 mm diameter molybdenum cylinder. The unique coaxial geometry of the sensor combined with its single-point electrical ground contact minimizes interference from the plasma/magnetic environment. Incident heat fluxes are inferred from surface temperature evolution via a 1D thermal heat transport model. For an incident heat flux of 10 MW/m2, surface temperatures rise ∼1000 °C/s, corresponding to a heat flux flowing along the local magnetic field of ∼200 MW/m2. Separate calorimeter sensors are used to independently confirm the derived heat fluxes by comparing total energies deposited during a plasma pulse. Langmuir probes in close proximity to the surface thermocouples are used to test plasma-sheath heat transmission theory and to identify potential sources of discrepancies among physical models.
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