4.5 Article

Fiber Bragg grating sensor array for detecting heat flux in vacuum

Journal

REVIEW OF SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS
Volume 93, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AIP Publishing
DOI: 10.1063/5.0100498

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TAE Technologies has developed an advanced diagnostic system using an industrial fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensor array to detect the heat flux along the wall of a vacuum vessel during plasma discharge in their experimental device C-2W.
In TAE Technologies' current experimental device, C-2W (also called Norman), record-breaking, advanced beam-driven field-reversed configuration plasmas are produced and sustained in steady state utilizing variable energy neutral beams, advanced divertors, edge-biasing electrodes, and an active plasma control system [Gota et al., Nucl. Fusion 61, 106039 (2021)]. A novel diagnostic has been developed by TAE Technologies to leverage an industrial fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensor array to detect heat flux along the wall of the vacuum vessel from a plasma discharge. The system consists of an optical fiber with FBG sensors distributed along its length, housed in a pressurized steel sheath. Each FBG sensor is constructed to reflect a different wavelength, the exact value of which is sensitive to the strain and temperature at the location of the grating in the fiber. The fiber is illuminated with broadband light, and the data acquisition system analyzes the spectrum of reflected light to determine the temperature at the location of each FBG. We have installed four of these vacuum-rated FBG sensor arrays on the C-2W experiment, each with 30 individual FBG sensors spaced at 0.15 m intervals along the 5 m fiber, with a 100 Hz acquisition rate. The measurement of temperature change due to a plasma discharge provides a single data point at each sensor location, creating a 120-point heat map of the vacuum vessel.

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