PPPL-4443
NCSX Trim Coil Design
Authors:M. Kalish, A. Brooks, J. Rushinski, R. Upcavage
Abstract:
The National Compact Stellarator Experiment (NCSX) was being constructed at the Princeton Plasma Physics
Laboratory in partnership with Oak Ridge National Laboratory before work was stopped in 2008. The objective of this
experiment was to develop the stellarator concept and evaluate it's potential as a model for future fusion power plants.
Stellarator design requires very precisely positioned Modular Coils of complex shape to form 3D plasmas. In the design of
NCSX, Trim Coils were required to compensate for both the positioning of the coils during assembly and the fabrication
tolerances of the Modular Coils. Use of the Trim Coils allowed for larger tolerances increasing ease of assembly and decreasing overall cost. A set of Trim coils was developed to suppress the toroidal flux in island regions due to misalignment, magnetic materials, and eddy currents. The requirement imposed upon the design forced the toroidal flux in island regions below 10% of the total toroidal flux in the plasma. An analysis was first performed to evaluate candidate Trim Coil configurations iterating both the size, number, and position of the coils. The design was optimized considering both performance and cost while staying within the tight restraints presented by the space limited geometry. The final design of the Trim Coils incorporated a 48 Coil top bottom symmetric set. Fabrication costs were minimized by having only two coil types and using a planar conventional design with off the shelf commercial conductor. The Trim Coil design incorporated supports made from simple structural shapes assembled together in a way which allowed for adjustment as well as accommodation for the tolerance build up on the mating surfaces. This paper will summarize the analysis that led to the optimization of the Trim Coils set, the trim coil mechanical design, thermal and stress analysis, and the design of the supporting Trim Coil structure
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Presented at: 23rd Symposium on Fusion Engineering, San Diego, CA May 31-June 4, 2009
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