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Overview of Recent Developments in Pellet Injection for ITER...

Publication Type
Conference Paper
Journal Name
Fusion Engineering and Design
Publication Date
Page Numbers
634 to 640
Volume
87
Issue
5-6
Conference Name
ISFNT-10 International Symposium on Fusion Nuclear Technology
Conference Location
Portland, Oregon, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
USDOE, INL, UCLA
Conference Date
-

Pellet injection is the primary fueling technique planned for core fueling of ITER burning plasmas. Also, the injection of relatively small pellets to purposely trigger rapid small edge localized modes (ELMs) has been proposed as a possible solution to the heat flux damage from larger natural ELMs likely to be an issue on the ITER divertor surfaces. The ITER pellet injection system is designed to inject pellets into the plasma through both inner and outer wall guide tubes. The inner wall guide tubes will provide high throughput pellet fueling while the outerwall guide tubes will be used primarily to trigger ELMs at a high frequency (>15 Hz). The pellet fueling rate ofeach injector is to be up to 120 Pa-m3/s, which will require the formation of solid D-T at a volumetric rate of ~1500 mm3/s. Two injectors are to be provided for ITER at the startup with a provision for up to six injectorsduring the D-T phase. The required throughput of each injector is greater than that of any injector built to date, and a novel twin-screw continuous extrusion system is being developed to meet the challenging design parameters. Status of the development activities will be presented, highlighting recent progress.