Title: Neutronics Plans and Status
1Neutronics Plans and Status
- Mohamed Sawan
- Fusion Technology Institute
- The University of Wisconsin
FIRE Project Meeting November 7,8, 2002 PPPL
2Impact of New Design on Neutronics Parameters
- Several design parameters changed as FIRE moved
from the 2-m machine to the 2.14-m machine - As a starting point for iteration with other
design tasks neutronics parameters are scaled for
the new machine design parameters - To obtain initial preliminary neutronics
parameters radial build was assumed not to
change. Change in IB FW/tiles thickness from 25
to 38 mm is the only observed change in the
current design. This increase is mainly to
accommodate diagnostics and might not impact TF
shielding
3Changes in Machine Parameters
4Scaling of Neutronics Parameters
- FW radii increased by 7 cm IB and 21 cm OB
- Height increased by 14 cm for same plasma
elongation - FW area increases by 21
- Average neutron wall loading for DT pulses with
largest power of 150 MW is reduced by a factor of
0.62 - Average NWL was 3 MW/m2 for 200 MW DT pulse
- Average NWL in current machine is 1.85 MW/m2
- All parameters that scale with neutron wall
loading such as flux, nuclear heating, damage
rates, dose rates, decay heat, etc will reduce by
38
5Impact on Cumulative Neutronics Parameters
- Goal is a combined total fusion energy of 5 TJ DT
and 0.5 TJ DD - Fluence dependent parameters (e.g., cumulative
radiation damage, insulator dose, and radwaste
classification) depend on cumulative FW fluence
(MW-yr/m2) not fusion energy and will reduce due
to larger FW area - Cumulative neutronics parameters reduce by a
factor of 0.83
6Impact of Tritium Burnup in DD Pulses
- 2 tritium burnup in DD pulses results in
production of 14 MeV neutrons while reducing
number of 2.45 MeV neutrons by 4.8 - 14 MeV neutrons produced are only 2 of the 2.45
MeV neutrons produced in DD pulses with
negligible impact on nuclear heating, etc during
1MW DD pulses. This is only 0.03 of neutrons
produced in 150 MW DT pulse - For 5 TJ DT 1.77x1024 14 MeV neutrons produced
- For 0.5 TJ DD 4.07x1023 2.45 MeV and 8.15x1021 14
MeV neutrons produced - Impact on fluence dependent parameters is
negligible
7Peak Nuclear Heating (W/cm3) for 150MW DT Shots
- For DD pulses with largest fusion power (1 MW),
neutron wall loading is a factor of 0.003 of that
for the DT pulses - Nuclear heating values are at least two orders of
magnitude lower
8Nuclear Heating in OB FW/Tiles
Nuclear Heating in OB VV at Midplane
9Nuclear Heating in Outer Divertor Plate
10Radial Variation of Nuclear Heating in IB TF at
Midplane
11Cumulative Damage in FIRE Components reduced by
17
- Peak end-of-life cumulative radiation damage
values in FIRE components are very low lt 0.03 dpa
- He Production in VV lt 1 appm Allowing for
Rewelding
12Cumulative Peak Magnet Insulator Dose( 5 TJ DT
Shots and 0.5 TJ DD Shots)
13Radiation Induced Resistivity in Cu
- Cumulative dpa and fluence in Cu TF coils reduced
by 17 - Component of resistivity increase from
transmutation products reduces by 17 - Reduction in dominating resistivity increase from
displacement damage is smaller because of
non-linear relation with cumulative dpa.
Reduction is 12 at front and 17 at back
14Impact on Activation Results
- Activity and decay heat values at shutdown are
almost fully dominated by activation during the
last pulse - Short term activity, decay heat, and dose rate
following DT pulses are reduced by 38 - Activity and decay heat generated following D-D
shots are more than three orders of magnitude
lower than the D-T shots - Following DT shots hands-on ex-vessel maintenance
is possible with - The 110 cm long steel shield plug in midplane
ports - The 20 cm shield at top of TF coil
- Following DD shots immediate access for
maintenance is possible behind OB VV - WDR reduced by 17 and all components still
qualify as Class C LLW (largest WDR is 0.15 for
OB FW)
15Plans for FY03
- (1) Perform self-consistent analysis for the 2.14
m machine - Update nuclear parameters for the machine
components (e.g., FW/tiles, VV, divertor,
magnets) - This task involves significant iteration with
other design tasks to converge on a
self-consistent design - This task is already underway and preliminary
results are presented
16Plans for FY03(Continued)
- (2) Assess the impact of operation schedule and
possible operation extension on key nuclear
parameters such as insulator dose - Dose was calculated for 5 TJ DT and 0.5 TJ DD
- Plans for higher fusion energy are being
considered - We need to make sure that the insulator dose does
not limit that possible extension - Include 14 MeV neutrons generated during DD
pulses - Define required spectra (neutron and gamma) for
irradiation experiments to properly simulate FIRE
conditions
17Plans for FY03(Continued)
- (3) Investigate the effect of 3-D geometry on
peak insulator dose and other Parameters at IB
midplane - Insulator dose is based on 1D model with plasma
extended uniformly to infinity in the vertical
direction - This affects the angular distribution on neutrons
incident on FW - Comparison between 1D and 3D results in ARIES
showed that 1D could overestimate radiation
damage close to FW by 20-50 - Will perform simple 3D calculations with
emphasize on conditions at midplane where the
worst parameters occur. Model does not have to
include details for other components away from
midplane - This tasks starts in April after we get a new
drawing with revised radial build
181-D Neutronics Yield Conservative Peak FW Damage
Parameters
- 3-D results were compared to 1-D results for
ARIES-ST and ARIES-AT - 1-D calculations overestimated peak damage
parameters at FW by up to a factor of 1.6
depending on the aspect ratio
19Plans for FY03(Continued)
- (4) Estimate nuclear environment at sensitive
diagnostics components - Due to limited resources estimates will be based
on 1D calculations and appropriate extrapolation - Calculate the neutron and gamma fluxes and
absorbed doses for the sensitive components (e.g.
silica and alumina) at selected locations - As starting point results given in memo of
2/25/2002 are to be scaled for new parameters - Identify a few cases where streaming is critical
and perform simple 2D calculations
20Assumed Radial Build
21Radial Build of FW/Tiles
- Radial build and composition of FW/tiles
- 5 mm Be PFC (90 Be)
- 18 mm Cu tiles (80 Cu)
- 2 mm gasket (50 Cu)
- 25 mm water cooled Cu vessel cladding (80
Cu, 15 water)
22Radial Build of Outer Divertor Plate
23Radial Build of VV
- 1.5 cm thick inner and outer 316SS facesheets
- Space between facesheets includes 60 304SS and
40 water except in IB region where 11 304SS and
89 water is used - VV thickness
- IB midplane 5 cm
- OB midplane 54 cm
- Divertor 12 cm
- 1.5 cm layer of thermal insulation (10
Microtherm insulation) attached to back of
coil-side VV facesheet
24TF Coil Model
- Baseline design with 16 wedged TF coils analyzed
- BeCu used in inner legs and OFHC in outer legs
- 90 packing fraction used in coils
- 304SS coil case used in OB region with 4 cm front
and 6 cm back thicknesses