skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Design and operation of a high-heat flux, flush-mounted ‘rail’ Langmuir probe array on Alcator C-Mod

Journal Article · · Nuclear Materials and Energy

A poloidal array of toroidally-extended, flush-mounted ‘rail’ Langmuir probes was recently installed on Alcator C-Mod's vertical target plate divertor. The aim was to investigate if a Langmuir probe array could be designed to survive reactor-level heat fluxes and have the ability to make measurements that could be reliably interpreted under reactor-level plasma densities, neutral densities and magnetic fields. Langmuir probes are typically built to have incident field-line angles > 10° to avoid interpretation issues associated with sheath expansion. However, at the high parallel heat fluxes experienced in reactor-relevant conditions such a probe would quickly overheat and melt. To mitigate both the issues of extreme heat flux and sheath expansion, each probe was designed to be flush with the divertor surface, toroidally-extended and field-aligned, giving it a ‘rail’ geometry. The flush mounted probes have proven to be exceptionally robust surviving the 2015–2016 campaign – a first for a C-Mod probe system. Examination of the probe current-voltage (I-V) characteristics reveals that they are immune to sheath expansion at incident field angles down to ~0.5°. Comparison of the flush probes to traditional proud probes shows that both measure the same electron pressure across the divertor plate. However, there are significant and systematic differences in the density, temperature and floating potential. This suggests that there is important physics, perhaps unique to conditions in a vertical-target plate divertor with small field-line attack angles, that affects the I-V characteristics and is not currently included in probe data analyses. Finally, the probe response is examined in the ‘death-ray’ regime, just near detachment. Previous work using proud probes has suggested that the ‘death-ray’ is an artefact of the probe bias. However, on flush mounted probes the ‘death-ray’ manifests itself under different conditions, which may provide insight into this unique phenomenon.

Research Organization:
Massachusetts Inst. of Technology (MIT), Cambridge, MA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Fusion Energy Sciences (FES)
Grant/Contract Number:
FC02-99ER54512
OSTI ID:
1772067
Alternate ID(s):
OSTI ID: 1534178
Journal Information:
Nuclear Materials and Energy, Journal Name: Nuclear Materials and Energy Vol. 12 Journal Issue: C; ISSN 2352-1791
Publisher:
ElsevierCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
Netherlands
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 7 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

References (11)

Recent sheath physics studies on DIII-D journal August 2015
ADX: a high field, high power density, advanced divertor and RF tokamak journal April 2015
Modeling of Local Edge Plasma Perturbations Induced by a Biased Probe journal June 2012
Flush mounted Langmuir probes in an oblique magnetic field journal June 1997
Transport of edge-localized mode energy in a scrape-off layer in the presence of collisionless fast electrons journal August 2002
Investigation of the fluxes to a surface at grazing angles of incidence in the tokamak boundary journal December 1990
The separation of angle and size effects on Langmuir characteristics journal February 1997
Experimental investigation of transport phenomena in the scrape-off layer and divertor journal February 1997
Divertor ‘death-ray’ explained: An artifact of a Langmuir probe operating at negative bias in a high-recycling divertor journal July 2013
Surface thermocouples for measurement of pulsed heat flux in the divertor of the Alcator C-Mod tokamak journal March 2012
The influence of magnetization strength on the sheath: Implications for flush-mounted probes journal December 1997