Commissioning and initial operation of KSTAR superconducting tokamak |
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Authors: | Yeong-Kook Oh W.C. Kim K.R. Park M.K. Park H.L. Yang Y.S. Kim Y. Chu Y.O. Kim J.G. Bak E.N. Baang S.W. Yoon S.H. Hahn H.J. Lee S.H. Park K.H. Kim J. Hong S.H. Baek M.K. Kim T.G. Lee S.I. Lee D.P. Ivanov |
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Affiliation: | 1. National Fusion Research Institute (NFRI), Daejeon, Republic of Korea;2. Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI), Daejeon, Republic of Korea;3. POSCON Cooperation, Kyungbuk, Republic of Korea;4. General Atomics (GA), San Diego, CA, USA;5. Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory (PPPL), Princeton, NJ, USA;6. Nuclear Fusion Institute (NFI), RRCKI, Moscow, Russia |
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Abstract: | The commissioning and the initial operation for the first plasma in the KSTAR device have been accomplished successfully without any severe failure preventing the device operation and plasma experiments. The commissioning is classified into four steps: vacuum commissioning, cryogenic cool-down commissioning, magnet system commissioning, and plasma discharge.Vacuum commissioning commenced after completion of the tokamak and basic ancillary systems construction. Base pressure of the vacuum vessel was about 3 × 10?6 Pa and that of the cryostat about 2.7 × 10?4 Pa, and both levels meet the KSTAR requirements to start the cool-down operation. All the SC magnets were cooled down by a 9 kW rated cryogenic helium facility and reached the base temperature of 4.5 K in a month. The performance test of the superconducting magnet showed that the joint resistances were below 3 nΩ and the resistance to ground after cool-down was over 1 GΩ. An ac loss test of each PF coil made by applying a dc biased sinusoidal current showed that the coupling loss was within the KSTAR requirement with the coupling loss time constant less than 35 ms for both Nb3Sn and NbTi magnets. All the superconducting magnets operated in stable without quench for long-time dc operation and with synchronized pulse operation by the plasma control system (PCS). By using an 84 GHz ECH system, second harmonic ECH assisted plasma discharges were produced successfully with loop voltage of less than 3 V. By the real-time feedback control, operation of 100 kA plasma current with pulse length up to 865 ms was achieved, which also meet the first plasma target of 100 kA and 100 ms. The KSTAR device will be operated to meet the missions of steady-state and high-beta achievement by system upgrades and collaborative researches. |
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