Abstract
Recent U.S. fusion development strategy reports all recommend that the U.S. should pursue innovative science and technology to enable construction of a fusion pilot plant (FPP) that produces net electricity from fusion at low capital cost. Compact tokamaks have been proposed as a means of potentially reducing the capital cost of a FPP. However, compact steady-state tokamak FPPs face the challenge of integrating a high fraction of self-driven current with high core confinement, plasma pressure, and high divertor parallel heat flux. This integration is sufficiently challenging that a dedicated sustained-high-power-density (SHPD) tokamak facility is proposed by the U.S. community as the optimal way to close this integration gap. Performance projections for the steady-state tokamak FPP regime are presented and a preliminary SHPD device with substantial flexibility in lower aspect ratio (A = 2-2.5), shaping, and divertor configuration to narrow gaps to an FPP is described.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Article number | 036026 |
| Journal | Nuclear Fusion |
| Volume | 62 |
| Issue number | 3 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Mar 2022 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- Nuclear and High Energy Physics
- Condensed Matter Physics
Keywords
- core-edge integration
- fusion pilot plant
- high-temperature superconductors
- liquid metals
- steady-state tokamak