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GAS EVOLUTION FROM INSULATING MATERIALS FOR SUPERCONDUCTING COIL OF ITER BY GAMMA RAY IRRADIATION AT LIQUID NITROGEN TEMPERATURE

Authors :
A. Idesaki
N. Koizumi
M. Sugimoto
N. Morishita
T. Ohshima
K. Okuno
U. (Balu) Balachandran
Kathleen Amm
David Evans
Eric Gregory
Peter Lee
Mike Osofsky
Sastry Pamidi
Chan Park
Judy Wu
Mike Sumption
Source :
AIP Conference Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
AIP, 2008.

Abstract

A laminated material composed of glass cloth/polyimide film/epoxy resin will be used as an insulating material for superconducting coil of International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER). In order to keep safe and stable operation of the superconducting coil system, it is indispensable to evaluate radiation resistance of the material, because the material is exposed to severe environments such as high radiation field and low temperature of 4 K. Especially, it is important to estimate the amount of gases evolved from the insulating material by irradiation, because the gases affect on the purifying system of liquid helium in the superconducting coil system. In this work, the gas evolution from the laminated material by gamma ray irradiation at liquid nitrogen temperature (77 K) was investigated, and the difference of gas evolution behavior due to difference of composition in the epoxy resin was discussed. It was found that the main gases evolved from the laminated material by the irradiation were hydrogen, carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide, and that the amount of gases evolved from the epoxy resin containing cyanate ester was about 60% less than that from the epoxy resin containing tetraglycidyl‐diaminophenylmethane (TGDDM).

Details

ISSN :
0094243X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
AIP Conference Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0c3068cccc15122ccf921949344bff9c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2900341