4.1 Article

Reconfiguration of an Electrothermal-Arc Plasma Source for In Situ PMI Studies

Journal

FUSION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Volume 77, Issue 7-8, Pages 921-927

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15361055.2021.1909989

Keywords

Electrothermal-arc plasma source; high heat flux; diagnostics; plasma-material interactions

Funding

  1. ORNL
  2. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DEAC05-00OR22725]
  3. DOE [DE-AC05 00OR22725]

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The ET-Arc is a plasma source developed to simulate transient plasma heat and particle fluxes similar to those produced in tokamaks. Various diagnostics and improvements have been made to the system for better implementation of plasma-material interaction studies.
An electrothermal-arc plasma source (ET-Arc) has been developed to produce transient plasma heat and particle fluxes similar to those produced by edge localized modes onto divertor plasma-facing components in tokamaks. The ET-Arc utilizes a capacitive discharge to send current through a 4-mm-diameter, 9-cm-long capillary source liner. The liner material is ablated to form a high-velocity plasma jet that impacts the target downstream. With the current discharge circuit configuration, pulse lengths are 1 to 2 ms in duration and deliver heat fluxes of 0.25 to 2.1 GW m(-2). The plasma was previously characterized with optical emission spectroscopy (OES) on helium emission lines. The He I line ratios were interpreted with collisional radiative analysis to calculate n(e) and T-e. The electron temperature and electron density ranged from T-e = 1 to 5 eV and n(e) = 10(22) to 10(28) electrons/m(3), respectively. Recently, the vacuum configuration and target of the ET-Arc device were modified to allow greater diagnostic access for plasma-material interaction (PMI) studies and diagnostic development. The diagnostic suite included two Tektronix high-voltage probes to measure the capacitor and discharge potentials, a discharge current monitor, Edgertronic SC1 high-speed cameras to image the discharge, and a FLIR SC4000 infrared camera to estimate heat flux on the target. The system used OES for plasma characterization, but a new Thomson scattering (TS) diagnostic has been implemented. This system is an Advanced Research Projects Agency - Energy (ARPA-E)-funded, portable diagnostic package for spectroscopic measurements of n(e), T-e, n(i), T-i,, and v(i), which includes both TS and OES. Additionally, a novel digital holography (DH) surface-imaging diagnostic was implemented to measure erosion rates in situ. Results from ex situ DH characterization of stainless steel targets exposed to the ET-Arc source indicated that surface erosion of similar to 150 nm per shot occurred and an in situ DH characterization of similar targets was planned. The arc-triggering system will be revised and optimized to better synchronize with the laser diagnostics. Details of the reconfigured ET-Arc source are reported here.

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