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NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled Fusion

Controlled thermonuclear fusion is one of the possible candidates for long term energy sources which will be indispensable for our highly technological society. However, the physics and technology of controlled fusion are extremely complex and still require a great deal of research and development b...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Post, D, Behrisch, R
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: Springer 1986
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-0067-1
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2224237
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author Post, D
Behrisch, R
author_facet Post, D
Behrisch, R
author_sort Post, D
collection CERN
description Controlled thermonuclear fusion is one of the possible candidates for long term energy sources which will be indispensable for our highly technological society. However, the physics and technology of controlled fusion are extremely complex and still require a great deal of research and development before fusion can be a practical energy source. For producing energy via controlled fusion a deuterium-tritium gas has to be heated to temperatures of a few 100 Million °c corres­ ponding to about 10 keV. For net energy gain, this hot plasma has to be confined at a certain density for a certain time One pro­ mising scheme to confine such a plasma is the use of i~tense mag­ netic fields. However, the plasma diffuses out of the confining magnetic surfaces and impinges on the surrounding vessel walls which isolate the plasma from the surrounding air. Because of this plasma wall interaction, particles from the plasma are lost to the walls by implantation and are partially reemitted into the plasma. In addition, wall atoms are released and can enter the plasma. These wall atoms or impurities can deteriorate the plasma performance due to enhanced energy losses through radiation and an increase of the required magnetic pressure or a dilution of the fuel in the plasma. Finally, the impact of the plasma and energy on the wall can modify and deteriorate the thermal and mechanical pro­ perties of the vessel walls.
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spelling cern-22242372021-04-22T06:40:04Zdoi:10.1007/978-1-4757-0067-1http://cds.cern.ch/record/2224237engPost, DBehrisch, RNATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled FusionNuclear Physics - TheoryControlled thermonuclear fusion is one of the possible candidates for long term energy sources which will be indispensable for our highly technological society. However, the physics and technology of controlled fusion are extremely complex and still require a great deal of research and development before fusion can be a practical energy source. For producing energy via controlled fusion a deuterium-tritium gas has to be heated to temperatures of a few 100 Million °c corres­ ponding to about 10 keV. For net energy gain, this hot plasma has to be confined at a certain density for a certain time One pro­ mising scheme to confine such a plasma is the use of i~tense mag­ netic fields. However, the plasma diffuses out of the confining magnetic surfaces and impinges on the surrounding vessel walls which isolate the plasma from the surrounding air. Because of this plasma wall interaction, particles from the plasma are lost to the walls by implantation and are partially reemitted into the plasma. In addition, wall atoms are released and can enter the plasma. These wall atoms or impurities can deteriorate the plasma performance due to enhanced energy losses through radiation and an increase of the required magnetic pressure or a dilution of the fuel in the plasma. Finally, the impact of the plasma and energy on the wall can modify and deteriorate the thermal and mechanical pro­ perties of the vessel walls.Springeroai:cds.cern.ch:22242371986
spellingShingle Nuclear Physics - Theory
Post, D
Behrisch, R
NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled Fusion
title NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled Fusion
title_full NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled Fusion
title_fullStr NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled Fusion
title_full_unstemmed NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled Fusion
title_short NATO Advanced Study Institute entitled Physics of Plasma-Wall Interactions in Controlled Fusion
title_sort nato advanced study institute entitled physics of plasma-wall interactions in controlled fusion
topic Nuclear Physics - Theory
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4757-0067-1
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2224237
work_keys_str_mv AT postd natoadvancedstudyinstituteentitledphysicsofplasmawallinteractionsincontrolledfusion
AT behrischr natoadvancedstudyinstituteentitledphysicsofplasmawallinteractionsincontrolledfusion