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Presented by Scott Willms (LANL) Harnessing Fusion Power Workshop UCLA March 2, 2009

Presented by Scott Willms (LANL) Harnessing Fusion Power Workshop UCLA March 2, 2009. Renew Fuel Cycle Panel. Fuel Cycle Panel Members. Scott Willms (LANL) Jim Klein (SRNL) Alice Ying (UCLA) Larry Baylor (ORNL) Martin Peng (ORNL) Dai-Kai Sze (UCSD).

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Presented by Scott Willms (LANL) Harnessing Fusion Power Workshop UCLA March 2, 2009

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  1. Presented by Scott Willms (LANL) Harnessing Fusion Power Workshop UCLA March 2, 2009 Renew Fuel Cycle Panel

  2. Fuel Cycle Panel Members • Scott Willms (LANL) • Jim Klein (SRNL) • Alice Ying (UCLA) • Larry Baylor (ORNL) • Martin Peng (ORNL) • Dai-Kai Sze (UCSD)

  3. Approach: Tie Fuel Cycle back to original Greenwald questions 1. “What R&D thrusts are needed to build DEMO.” 1.1 “What is needed to be able to properly supply and handle tritium for DEMO?” 1.1 How do we close the fusion fuel cycle?

  4. Seven sub-questions

  5. Q 1-4 • 1.1.1 What is needed to adequately process fusion fuel for DEMO? • 1.1.2 What is needed to provide torus vacuum and fueling for DEMO? • 1.1.3 What is needed to adequately contain and handle tritium for DEMO? • 1.1.4 What is needed to adequately perform tritium accountability and nuclear facility operations for DEMO?

  6. Q 5-7 • 1.1.5 What is needed to breed tritium for DEMO? • 1.1.6 What is needed to extract tritium from the breeding system for DEMO? • 1.1.7 What is needed to characterize, recover and handle in-vessel tritium for DEMO?

  7. Backdrop DEMO Need for DEMO 500 liters/min? Time requirement 1 hr 6000 gm inventory Duty cycle: 50% Power: 2000 MW State-of-the-art 6 liters/min Time requirement 24 hr 100 gm inventory Duty cycle: 15% “Power”: 1000 MW Need for ITER 120 liters/min Time requirement 1 hr 4000 gm inventory Duty cycle: 5% Power: 400 MW

  8. Detail under each question

  9. 1.1.1 What is needed to adequately process fusion fuel for DEMO? • Fuel cleanup • Isotope separation • Tritium storage and delivery • Water detritiation • Tritium pumping • Effluent detritiation Process Glovebox Air • Gas analysis • Process control

  10. 1.1.2 What is needed to provide torus vacuum and fueling for DEMO? • Torus Vacuum pumps  • Roughing pumps • Gas puffing • Pellet fueling • Disruption mitigation • ELM pacing Snail pump under test at LANL.

  11. 1.1.3 What is needed to adequately contain and handle tritium for DEMO? • Primary, secondary and tertiary containment  • Permeation barriers • Occupational and environmental tritium monitoring • Maintenance systems • Waste handling, characterization and processing • Decontamination and decommissioning • Personnel protection equipment

  12. 1.1.4 What is needed to adequately perform tritium accountability and nuclear facility operations for DEMO? • Tritium accountability measurement techniques  • Tritium accountability methodology and procedures • Non-Proliferation approaches • Systems and approaches to ensure worker and public safety (authorization basis) • Tritium transportation technology and approaches • Waste repository • Tritium supply

  13. 0.2- 0.4 mmLi4SiO4 pebbles (FZK) 0.6 – 0.8 mm Li2TiO3 pebbles (CEA) 1.1.5 What is needed to breed tritium for DEMO? • Tritium breeding blanket materials and configurations • Blanket structural materials • Blanket operations and control • Blanket maintenance and disposal • Blanket diagnostics

  14. 1.1.6 What is needed to extract tritium from the breeding system for DEMO? • Tritium extraction from breeding materials • Tritium extraction from blanket coolants • Tritium extraction diagnostics • Blanket systems tritium handling and containment

  15. 1.1.7 What is needed to characterize, recover and handle in-vessel tritium for DEMO? • In-vessel tritium characterization • In-vessel tritium control and removal • In-vessel component waste handling • Mitigation of in-vessel off-normal effects on tritium systems

  16. Backdrop DEMO Need for DEMO 500 liters/min? Time requirement 1 hr 6000 gm inventory Duty cycle: 50% Power: 2000 MW State-of-the-art 6 liters/min Time requirement 24 hr 100 gm inventory Duty cycle: 15% “Power”: 1000 MW Need for ITER 120 liters/min Time requirement 1 hr 4000 gm inventory Duty cycle: 5% Power: 400 MW

  17. 1.1.1 Process Fusion Fuel

  18. State-of-the-Art • Systems developed at TSTA, JAERI, FzK, JET, SRNL, TFTR, Chalk River and other facilities define the state-of-the-art. These systems were typically tested at 1/20th scale (or less) of ITER. • ITER will be a major technological challenge and much will be learned from ITER. The ITER tritium systems will largely be a production system with little opportunity for experimentation. • DEMO will higher throughput (4x ITER) and duty factor (10x ITER)

  19. Gaps • Fuel Cleanup: Technology improvement • Isotope Separation: Tritium inventory and technology improvement • Tritium Storage and Delivery: Technology and assaying improvement • Water Detritiation: Technology improvement. Need low-level tritiated water processing system. • Pumping: Need larger capacity pumps • Effluent Detritiation: Would benefit from system which does not produce water • Gas Analysis: Technology improvement • Process Control: Duty cycle and flowrate will require better control • Modeling: Accurate, easy-to-use models will be essential

  20. 1.2 Provide vacuum and fueling

  21. Torus Vacuum Pumping • Function: The torus vacuum pumping must maintain low divertor pressure (~10 Pa) while removing helium ash that will be generated by the fusion burn. • State-of-the-art: The pumping system for ITER consists of 8 cryosorption pumps that are regenerated every 5 minutes in a cyclic fashion. These pumps are backed by tritium compatible roughing pumps (still under development). Frequent regeneration will be challenging. • DEMO requirements: 4x ITER on flowrate and 10x on duty cycle. • Gaps: Roughing pumps and torus cryopumps. Pumps that separate species have advantages.

  22. Fueling • Function: The fueling system must provide DT fuel to the burning plasma and also provide gas to the SOL and divertor to minimize impurity generation and sweep impurities to the divertor. • State-of-the-art: The pellet fueling system for ITER will be the state-of-the art. • DEMO requirements: 4x ITER on flowrate and 10x on duty cycle. Pellet penetration requirement may be increased. • Gaps: TBD based on fueling penetration requirements, feed rate, tokamak/not tokamak, etc. State-of-the-art pellet injector

  23. Disruption and ELM Mitigation • Function: Provide massive gas injection(?) for disruption mitigation and rapid small pellets for ELM pacing • State-of-the-art: • For disruption mitigation gas jets. • ELM mitigation with pellet pacing is not well developed at all. The next few years will hopefully answer the question of whether or not this could be employed. • DEMO Requirements: The requirements for disruption and ELM mitigation in DEMO are completely unknown at this point. These requirements could have a significant effect on the fueling and pumping systems as well as the overall fuel cycle design. • Gaps: TBD at this point

  24. 1.1.3 Contain and handle tritium

  25. Tritium containment and handling • State-of-the-art: Experience at recent tritium facilities. ITER will be challenged in this area. • Demo requirement: Operation of high-temperature machine with useful power extraction and high duty factor. • Gaps • Control of tritium through non-traditional equipment (heat exchangers; large, high-temperature components; long high-temperature pipe runs) • Primary, secondary and tertiary containment . Room processing systems. • Permeation barrier would help (but development has not been successful, and the barrier factor degrades under irradiation)

  26. 1.1.4 Tritium accountability and nuclear facility operations

  27. Tritium Accountability Measurements • State-of-the-Art • Dedicated/custom calorimeters: ± 0.25% in 6-8 hours • P-V-T-Composition tank measurements: 2% or less • In-bed accountability: 1-2% of full bed inventory • Demo Requirements • Accuracy of ± 2 grams T2 out of “kilograms being processed” • Gaps • ITER “inventory-by-difference” errors propagate quickly. Direct methods of “estimating” tritium inventory need to be developed .

  28. Tritium Accountability Methodology and Procedures. Non-Proliferation. • State-of-the-Art • Periodic reconciliation between “book” inventory versus “physical” inventory • Attractiveness level defined by DOE Orders. Tritium is less attractive than special nuclear materials, but still requires safeguards • “Gates, Guards, and Guns” with access restrictions • Demo Requirements • Ensure no surreptitious diversion of tritium • Gaps • Method to meet requirements (measurement or protection) • Address political concerns

  29. Tritium Safety (Authorization Basis/Licensing) • State-of-the-Art • DOE, NRC, Fusion Safety Code and ITER requirements • Risk-based assessments used for calculation of dose to the public • “Agreements” made between contractors and DOE for chronic emission limits from facilities • Demo Function/Requirements • Some type of licensing/regulations will be required • Gaps • Agreement to arbitrarily “low” emission requirements may be cost prohibitive for Demo • Permits required for discharge above drinking water standard

  30. Tritium Waste Disposal • State-of-the-Art • (see Safety and Environmental presentation) • Demo Function/Requirements • Some type of on-site or permitted disposal site will be needed • Gaps • Assurance that fusion will not suffer from “Yucca Mountain syndrome” • Recycle option from “Safety and Environmental” presentation needs to include tritium recovery functionality in project scope

  31. 1.1.5 Breed tritium

  32. EU DEMO Breeding Blankets Parameters

  33. [0.5-1.5] mm/s [18-54] mm/s Neutron Multiplier Be, Be12Ti (<2mm) Tritium Breeder Li2TiO3 (<2mm) PbLi flow scheme First Wall (RAFS, F82H) Surface Heat Flux Neutron Wall Load Blanket systems are complex and have many integrated functions, materials, and interfaces HCLL HCSB Solid Breeder Blanket utilizes immobile solid lithium ceramic breeder and Be multiplier for tritium self-sufficiency

  34. The Dual Coolant Lead Lithium (DCLL) TBM Concept provides a pathway to high outlet temperature with RAFS and SiC Flow Channel Inserts (FCI) to thermally and electrically isolate PbLi breeder/coolant PbLi PbLi Flow Channels SiC FCI He He-cooled First Wall 2 mm gap 484 mm He US DCLL Blanket

  35. NGK Be-pebble In-pile pebble bed assembly tests State-of-the-art R&D on solid breeder Unit: mm NRG Li4SiO4 pebbles in filling Out-of-pile tests (ENEA)

  36. Tritium breeding summary • State-of-the-art: Multiple solid and liquid breed concepts. Parts of these concepts have been tested. No realistic, integrates tests have been performed. • Demo requirement: Demo must breed all of its own tritium. • Gap: Integrated testing, demonstration and qualification of Demo breeder needed prior to Demo construction • Example sub-gaps: • For DCLL, what characterizes the flow channel inserts (FCI) made of SiCf/SiC composite for the dual coolant lead lithium (DCLL) blanket application, and how will such a component maintain its function throughout blanket lifetime? • For solid breeder: What radiation resistant properties should the solid breeder pebble have in order to maintain good tritium release properties throughout blanket lifetime?

  37. 1.1.6 Recovery of bred tritium

  38. Bred tritium extraction summary • State-of-the-art: Data-to-date suggest that tritium recovery from the breeding material with acceptable tritium inventory is feasible. However, only preliminary tests have been performed. • Demo requirement: Recover tritium so that inventory and tritium migration is acceptable • Gap: • Select and test tritium extraction methods • Demonstrate that tritium can be reduced to levels which will not challenge containment systems. Include extraction from Be. • Testing in concert with 14 MeV neutrons, high burn up and high flux are needed.

  39. 1.1.7 Characterize, recover and handle in-vessel tritium

  40. In-Vessel Tritium Holdup – Function & State-of-Art • State-of-the-Art • Full W and/or Be wall test planned on JET and Asdex-Ug • ITER design includes C (strike point) and W for divertor, and Be wall • Data from deuterium-fueled toroidal and linear experiments indicate difficulties for using C and Be in Demo (erosion, co-deposition, migration etc.) • Infiltration and damage by He in W plasma facing component observed under non-Demo-like environment • Demo Function/Requirements • Relatively low burn fraction results in high fueling rates • Presently assume W PFC and first walls with only limited erosion, re-deposition, and co-deposition. • Will have much higher temperature than ITER

  41. In-Vessel Tritium Holdup – Gaps & Research Thrust • Gaps • Presently there is no W PFC testing data in Demo-like nuclear environment • Tritium hold-up issues can be drastically reduced if (burn up fraction) / (recycling coefficient) could be substantially reduced • Needed Research • Test Tritium Hold-up on W divertor and First Wall under Demo-relevant conditions • Test and develop knowledge needed to increase (burn up fraction) / (recycling coefficient) under relevant toroidal plasma conditions ( Themes I, II, III)

  42. Additional Issues • Tritium recovery in waste components • ITER: high temperature bake out in tritium controlled hot cell • Hold-up in hidden and cooler areas (gaps, ducts, behind in-vessel components such as RF launchers, etc.) • Maintain similar temperature in these components • Wall conditioning produced tritium stream • ITER: use available tritium exhaust and recovery system • Impurities introduced into vessel due to abnormal or accidental conditions including from auxiliary systems such as NBI (SF6 insulator) • Limit material choices for in-vessel and auxiliary systems

  43. Gap Summary

  44. Fuel Processing Thrusts • Tritium processing facility • CTF • Heated loop • ITER TBM • Neutron-irradiated permeation experiment • Tritium extraction from breeder • Modeling

  45. Thrust notes • CTF and ITER TBM from a tritium standpoint will likely be “production” facilities and will afford little opportunity for experimentation • The other thrusts will provide much opportunity for experimentation

  46. Initial ideas for fuel cycle thrusts

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