PPPL-4019 is available in pdf format (4.0 MB).

Component Manufacturing Development for the National Compact Stellarator Experiment (NCSX)

Authors: P.J. Heitzenroeder, T.G. Brown, J.H. Chrzanowski, M.J. Cole, P.L. Goranson, G.H. Neilson, B.E. Nelson, W.T. Reiersen, L.L Sutton, D.E. Williamson, and M.E. Viola

Date of PPPL Report: October 2004

Presented at: the 20th IAEA Fusion Energy Conference, 1-6 November 2004, Vilamoura, Portugal. The papers will be published by the IAEA as unedited proceedings in electronic format on CD-ROM and on the IAEA Physics Section web site as soon as possible after the conference.

NCSX [National Compact Stellarator Experiment] is the first of a new class of stellarators called compact stellarators which hold the promise of retaining the steady state feature of the stellarator but at a much lower aspect ratio and using a quasi-axisymmetric magnetic field to obtain tokamak-like performance. Although much of NCSX is conventional in design and construction, the vacuum vessel and modular coils provide significant engineering challenges due to their complex shapes, need for high dimensional accuracy, and the high current density required in the modular coils due space constraints. Consequently, a three-phase development program has been undertaken. In the first phase, laboratory/industrial studies were performed during the development of the conceptual design to permit advances in manufacturing technology to be incorporated into NCSX's plans. In the second phase, full-scale prototype modular coil winding forms, compacted cable conductors, and 20 degree sectors of the vacuum vessel were fabricated in industry. In parallel, the NCSX project team undertook R&D studies that focused on the windings. The third (production) phase began in September 2004. First plasma is scheduled for January 2008.