학술논문

Material Plasma Exposure eXperiment (MPEX) High Heat Flux Bellows for Component Alignment in High Microwave Environment
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on. 50(12):5093-5098 Dec, 2022
Subject
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Bellows
Heating systems
Plasmas
Electromagnetic heating
Coolants
Plasma temperature
Solid modeling
computational fluid dynamics (CFDs)
high heat flux components
high microwave environment
thermal hydraulics
Language
ISSN
0093-3813
1939-9375
Abstract
The Material Plasma Exposure eXperiment (MPEX) device is a linear plasma device developed to perform plasma material interaction experiments under the conditions prototypic of a fusion reactor divertor. MPEX has multiple systems that must be precisely aligned to the plasma axis, including an electron cyclotron heating system that emits up to 400 kW of microwave power into the vacuum vessel. Five distinct systems require precise alignment on the MPEX device, thus requiring four bellows, all of which are adjacent to the plasma at a relatively high heat flux of approximately 47 kW/m2 and microwave power regions. The MPEX high heat flux bellows (HHFB) is designed to deliver 6 degrees of freedom positioning. The HHFB includes titanium–zirconium–molybdenum (TZM) inserts that are brazed into a Glidcop AL-15 body using a high-temperature braze alloy, thus blocking direct line of sight to an edge-welded bellows from the plasma and microwave screen to block microwaves from the bellows. A custom ConFlat knife edge is machined into the Glidcop AL-15, so the vacuum flanges do not need a braze or weld joint on the vacuum interface. Fingerstock or copper mesh is used to restrict microwave power from entering the interstitial space between the water-cooled Glidcop AL-15 body and edge-welded bellows. Glidcop AL-15 was selected as the material of choice for the water-cooled body because it can maintain mechanical integrity at elevated temperatures, and it also allows for a high-temperature braze. TZM was selected for its machinability and compatibility with vacuum and plasma requirements. A test article is also being considered for a similarly shaped component, the MPEX limiter, that will demonstrate the integrity of the braze joint under high thermal load. Results from this testing will be extrapolated to deduce the lifetime and integrity of the HHFB design.