| Helically Symmetric eXperiment | |
|---|---|
| Device type | Stellarator |
| Location | Madison,Wisconsin,US |
| Affiliation | University of Wisconsin–Madison |
| Technical specifications | |
| Major radius | 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in) |
| Minor radius | 0.15 m (5.9 in) |
| Plasma volume | 0.44 m3 |
| Magnetic field | 1.25 T (12,500 G) |
| Heating power | 100 kW (ECH) |
| Discharge duration | 0.2 s (pulse) |
| Plasma current | 13.4 kA |
| Plasma temperature | 2000–2500 eV (electron temp.) |
| History | |
| Year(s) of operation | 1999–present |
| Links | |
| Other links | HSX Device Parameters |
TheHelically Symmetric Experiment (HSX, stylized asHelically Symmetric eXperiment), is an experimentalplasma confinement device at theUniversity of Wisconsin–Madison, with design principles that are intended to be incorporated into afusion reactor. The HSX is a modular coilstellarator which is atoroid-shapedpressure vessel with externalelectromagnets which generate amagnetic field for the purpose of containing a plasma. It began operation in 1999.[1]
Astellarator is amagnetic confinement fusion device that uses external magnetic coils to generate all of the magnetic fields needed to confine the high temperature plasma. In contrast, intokamaks andreversed field pinches, the magnetic field is created by the interaction of external magnets and anelectrical current flowing through the plasma. The lack of this large externally driven plasma current makes stellarators suitable for steady-state fusion power plants.
However, due to non-axisymmetric nature of the fields, old stellarators have a combination of toroidal and helical modulation of the magnetic field lines, which leads to high transport of plasma out of the confinement volume at fusion-relevant conditions, solved in theWendelstein 7-X which has a better particle confinement than the expected in ITER, and achieve plasma duration of 30 minutes. This large transport in old stellarators can limit their performance asfusion reactors.
This problem can be largely reduced by tailoring the magnetic field geometry. The dramatic improvements in computer modeling capability in the last two decades has helped to "optimize" the magnetic geometry to reduce this transport, resulting in a new class of stellarators called "quasi-symmetric stellarators". Computer-modeled odd-lookingelectromagnets will directly produce the needed magnetic field configuration. These devices combine the good confinement properties of tokamaks and the steady-state nature of conventional stellarators. The Helically Symmetric Experiment (HSX) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is such a quasi-helically symmetric stellarator (helical axis of symmetry).
The magnetic field in HSX is generated by a set of 48 twisted coils arranged in four field periods. HSX typically operates at a magnetic field of 1 Tesla at the center of the plasma column. A set of auxiliary coils is used to deliberately break the symmetry to mimic conventional stellarator properties for comparison.
The HSX vacuum vessel is made of stainless steel, and is helically shaped to follow the magnetic geometry.
Plasma formation and heating is achieved using 28 GHz, 100 kWelectron cyclotron resonance heating (ECRH). A second 100 kWgyrotron has recently been installed on HSX to perform heat pulse modulation studies.[2]
Plasmas as high as 3kiloelectronvolts in temperature and about 8×1012/cc in density are routinely formed for various experiments.[citation needed]
Experiments have shown that edge magnetic islands affect particle fueling and exhaust. In HSX, the presence of a magnetic island chain at the plasma edge increases the plasma sourcing to exhaust ratio but reduces fueling efficiency by 25%. Moving the island radially inward decreases both the effective and global particle confinement times. This process is effective for controlling plasma fueling and helium exhaust times.[3]
HSX has a large set of diagnostics to measure properties of plasma and magnetic fields. The following gives a list of major diagnostics and subsystems.
HSX has made and continues to make fundamental contributions to the physics of quasisymmetric stellarators that show significant improvement over the conventional stellarator concept.[citation needed] These include:
A large number of experimental and computational research works are being done in HSX by students, staff and faculties. Some of them are in collaboration with other universities and national laboratories, both in the USA and abroad. Major research projects at present are listed below: