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1.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 89(6): 063508, 2018 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29960581

RESUMO

Plasma Facing Components (PFC) temperature measurement is mandatory to ensure safe high power and long pulse tokamak operation. IR thermography systems which are widely used in magnetic fusions devices become challenged with the choice of tungsten as a PFC material in the ITER tokamak, mainly due to emissivity uncertainties and reflection issues in a hot environment. Embedded temperature measurements are foreseen to cross-check the IR thermography measurements. Fiber Bragg grating sensors are potentially of great interest for this application because they are immune to electromagnetic interference and allow the measurement of a large number of temperature spots on a single fiber. Four optical fiber temperature sensing probes, each of them including 11 regenerated fiber Bragg gratings equally spaced by 12.5 mm (equivalent to one ITER-like tungsten monoblock), have been specifically designed and manufactured for the WEST project (W-tungsten Environment and Steady State Tokamak). The four probes are embedded in W-coated graphite components at two different distances from the surface, 3.5 mm and 7 mm, to cover a wide range of temperatures up to 900 °C. This paper addresses the design and integration issues and the qualification and performance assessment performed in the laboratory. It also shows the first measurements of this new diagnostic achieved in a tokamak environment during baking of the machine and during early diverted plasma exposure.

2.
Rev Sci Instrum ; 85(10): 104905, 2014 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25362442

RESUMO

In nuclear fusion devices, such as Tore Supra, the plasma facing components (PFC) are in carbon. Such components are exposed to very high heat flux and the surface temperature measurement is mandatory for the safety of the device and also for efficient plasma scenario development. Besides this measurement is essential to evaluate these heat fluxes for a better knowledge of the physics of plasma-wall interaction, it is also required to monitor the fatigue of PFCs. Infrared system (IR) is used to manage to measure surface temperature in real time. For carbon PFCs, the emissivity is high and known (ɛ ∼ 0.8), therefore the contribution of the reflected flux from environment and collected by the IR cameras can be neglected. However, the future tokamaks such as WEST and ITER will be equipped with PFCs in metal (W and Be/W, respectively) with low and variable emissivities (ɛ ∼ 0.1-0.4). Consequently, the reflected flux will contribute significantly in the collected flux by IR camera. The modulated active pyrometry, using a bicolor camera, proposed in this paper allows a 2D surface temperature measurement independently of the reflected fluxes and the emissivity. Experimental results with Tungsten sample are reported and compared with simultaneous measurement performed with classical pyrometry (monochromatic and bichromatic) with and without reflective flux demonstrating the efficiency of this method for surface temperature measurement independently of the reflected flux and the emissivity.

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