Shield design for next-generation, low-neutron-fluence, superconducting tokamaks
Abstract
A shield design using stainless steel (SST), water, boron carbide, lead, and concrete materials was developed for the next-generation tokamak device with superconducting toroidal field (TF) coils and low neutron fluence. A device such as the Tokamak Fusion Core Experiment (TFCX) is representative of the tokamak design which could use this shield design. The unique feature of this reference design is that a majority of the bulk steel in the shield is in the form of spherical balls with two small, flat spots. The balls are purchased from ball-bearing manufacturers and are added as bulk shielding to the void areas of built-up, structural steel shells which form the torus cavity of the plasma chamber. This paper describes the design configuration of the shielding components.
- Publication:
-
Presented at the 6th Topical Meeting on the Technol. of Fusion Energy
- Pub Date:
- March 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985tfe..meetQ....L
- Keywords:
-
- Boron Carbides;
- Stainless Steels;
- Superconducting Magnets;
- Tokamak Devices;
- Bumpy Toruses;
- Plasma Physics;
- Reactor Design;
- Shells (Structural Forms);
- Plasma Physics