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The SPARC Toroidal Field Model Coil Program

Authors :
Hartwig, Zachary
Vieira, Rui
Dunn, Darby
Golfinopoulos, Theodore
LaBombard, Brian
Lammi, Christopher
Michael, Phil
Agabian, Susan
Arsenault, David
Barnett, Raheem
Barry, Mike
Bartoszek, Larry
Beck, William
Bellofatto, David
Brunner, Daniel
Burke, William
Burrows, Jason
Byford, William
Cauley, Charles
Chamberlain, Sarah
Chavarria, David
Cheng, JL
Chicarello, James
Cote, Karen
Cotta, Corinne
Diep, Van
Dombrowski, Eric
Doody, Jeffrey
Doos, Raouf
Eberlin, Brian
Estrada, Jose
Fry, Vincent
Fulton, Matthew
Garberg, Sarah
Granetz, Robert
Greenberg, Aliya
Greenwald, Martin
Heller, Samuel
Hubbard, Amanda
Ihloff, Ernest
Irby, James
Iverson, Mark
Jardin, Peter
Korsun, Daniel
Kuznetsov, Sergey
Lammi, Chris
Walsh, Steven Lane
Landry, Richard
Lations, Richard
Levine, Matthew
Mackay, George
Metcalfe, Kristin
Moazeni, Kevin
Mota, John
Mouratidis, Theodore
Mumgaard, Robert
Muncks, JP
Murray, Richard
Nash, Daniel
Nottingham, Ben
Shea, Colin O
Pfeiffer, Andrew
Pierson, Samuel
Purdy, Clayton
Radovinsky, Alexi
Ravikumar, DJ
Reyes, Veronica
Riva, Nicolo
Rosati, Ron
Rowell, Michael
Salazar, Erica E.
Santoro, Fernando
Sattarov, Dior
Saunders, Wayne
Schweiger, Patrick
Schweiger, Shane
Shepard, Maise
Shiraiwa, Syunichi
Silveira, Maria
Snowman, FT
Sorbom, Brandon
Stahle, Peter
Stevens, Ken
Stiebler, Joseph
Stillerman, Joshua
Tammana, Deepthi
Tracy, David
Turcotte, Ronnie
Uppalapati, Kiran
Vernacchia, Matthew
Vidal, Christopher
Voirin, Erik
Warner, Alex
Watterson, Amy
Whyte, Dennis
Wilcox, Sidney
Wolf, Michael
Wood, Bruce
Zhou, Lihua
Zhukovsky, Alex
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The SPARC Toroidal Field Model Coil (TFMC) Program was a three-year effort between 2018 and 2021 that developed novel Rare Earth Yttrium Barium Copper Oxide (REBCO) superconductor technologies and then successfully utilized these technologies to design, build, and test a first-in-class, high-field (~20 T), representative-scale (~3 m) superconducting toroidal field coil. With the principal objective of demonstrating mature, large-scale, REBCO magnets, the project was executed jointly by the MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center (PSFC) and Commonwealth Fusion Systems (CFS). The TFMC achieved its programmatic goal of experimentally demonstrating a large-scale high-field REBCO magnet, achieving 20.1 T peak field-on-conductor with 40.5 kA of terminal current, 815 kN/m of Lorentz loading on the REBCO stacks, and almost 1 GPa of mechanical stress accommodated by the structural case. Fifteen internal demountable pancake-to-pancake joints operated in the 0.5 to 2.0 nOhm range at 20 K and in magnetic fields up to 12 T. The DC and AC electromagnetic performance of the magnet, predicted by new advances in high-fidelity computational models, was confirmed in two test campaigns while the massively parallel, single-pass, pressure-vessel style coolant scheme capable of large heat removal was validated. The REBCO current lead and feeder system was experimentally qualified up to 50 kA, and the crycooler based cryogenic system provided 600 W of cooling power at 20 K with mass flow rates up to 70 g/s at a maximum design pressure of 20 bar-a for the test campaigns. Finally, the feasibility of using passive, self-protection against a quench in a fusion-scale NI TF coil was experimentally assessed with an intentional open-circuit quench at 31.5 kA terminal current.<br />Comment: 17 pages 9 figures, overview paper and the first of a six-part series of papers covering the TFMC Program

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2308.12301
Document Type :
Working Paper