TJ-II
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TJ-II is a flexible Heliac installed at Spain's National Fusion Laboratory.TJ-II
/ref> Its first plasma run was in 1997, and as of 2022 is still operational.


History

The flexible Heliac TJ-II was designed on the basis of calculations performed by the team of physicists and engineers of CIEMAT, in collaboration with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL, USA) and the
Max Planck Institute of Plasma Physics The Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics (german: Max-Planck-Institut für Plasmaphysik, IPP) is a physics institute investigating the physical foundations of a fusion power plant. The IPP is an institute of the Max Planck Society, part of th ...
(IPP, Germany). The TJ-II project received preferential support from the
European Atomic Energy Community The European Atomic Energy Community (EAEC or Euratom) is an international organisation established by the Euratom Treaty on 25 March 1957 with the original purpose of creating a specialist market for nuclear power in Europe, by developing nucl ...
(EURATOM) for phase I (Physics) in 1986 and for phase II (Engineering) in 1990. The construction of this flexible Heliac was carried out in parts according to its constitutive elements, which were commissioned to various European companies, although 60% of the investments reverted to Spanish companies.


Precedents

TJ-II is the third magnetic confinement device in a series. In 1983, the device TJ-I was taken into operation. The denomination of this device is due to the abbreviation of "Tokamak de la Junta de Energía Nuclear", this being the former denomination of CIEMAT. The abbreviation was maintained for successive devices for administrative reasons. In 1994, the torsatron TJ-IU was taken into operation. This was the first magnetic confinement device entirely built in Spain. Currently, TJ-IU is located at the University of Stuttgart in Germany under the name of TJ-K (the 'K' stands for Kiel, its first location in Germany, before arriving in Stuttgart).


Description

In TJ-II, the magnetic trap is obtained by means of various sets of coils that completely determine the magnetic surfaces before plasma initiation. The toroidal field is created by 32 coils. The three-dimensional twist of the central axis of the configuration is generated by means of two central coils: one circular and one helical. The vertical position of the plasma is controlled by the vertical field coils. The combined action of these magnetic fields generate bean-shaped magnetic surfaces that guide the particles of the plasma so that they do not collide with the vacuum vessel wall.


Parameters

It is a four period low magnetic shear
stellarator A stellarator is a plasma device that relies primarily on external magnets to confine a plasma. Scientists researching magnetic confinement fusion aim to use stellarator devices as a vessel for nuclear fusion reactions. The name refers to the ...
with major radius R = 1.5 m, average minor radius a < 0.22 m, and magnetic field on axis up to 1.2 T. It is 'flexible' because varying the currents in the central circular and helical coils changes the magnetic configuration (iota ≈ 1.28 – 2.24) and plasma shape and sizes (plasma volume ≈ 0.6 – 1.1 m3). It has 32 toroidal coils (in a rounded square shape), and 4 poloidal coils (2 above and 2 below), and 2 helical coils around the 'central conductor'. The central conductor is inside the toroidal coils and the plasma and vacuum vessel forms a helix around it. It can produce a 0.25s pulse every 7 mins.


Goals and Research

The objective of the experimental program of TJ-II is to investigate the physics of plasma in a device with a helical magnetic axis having a great flexibility in its magnetic configuration, and to contribute to the international effort regarding the study of magnetic confinement devices for fusion.


Experiment

* Transport and magnetic configuration, iota effects * Confinement transitions, zonal flows * Internal Transport Barriers * Plasma Wall Interaction (in 2008 it experimented with
lithium Lithium (from el, λίθος, lithos, lit=stone) is a chemical element with the symbol Li and atomic number 3. It is a soft, silvery-white alkali metal. Under standard conditions, it is the least dense metal and the least dense solid ...
wall componentsThe Li-wall Stellarator Experiment in TJ-II. Tabares
/ref>). * Impurity transport * Instabilities * Turbulence


Theory

* Neoclassical transport * Self-Organised Criticality * Non-diffusive transport * Gyrokinetic simulations * Divertor studies for TJ-II * Topology and transport (research project funded by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación)


Diagnostics development


References


Further reading

*FusionWiki, jointly hosted by LNF and Fusenet http://wiki.fusenet.eu/wiki/TJ-II


External links


TJ-II project website
{{fusion experiments Stellarators Plasma physics facilities