Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
SPIDER [1] is a prototype high-current, multibeamlet, beam source of the ITER
Heating Neutral Beam [2] injector. The nominal beam parameters are 1280 beam-
lets, for a total of 70A H- (56A D-), accelerated at an energy up to 100keV. A
heat
ux up to 5 MW/m2 is expected at the calorimeter: a movable diagnos-
tic calorimeter [3] will be used in short-pulses, as a direct mean to obtain the
beam footprint, while a fixed beam-dump[4] is installed for steady-state opera-
tion. During SPIDER operations, numerical simulations of beam extraction and
accelerator will be carried out to support the experimental campaign: for the
comparison between simulations and experiment, measuring the beam emittance
is extremely useful, because it is the most complete characterization of a particle
beam. We discuss in this paper two proposals for the additional beam-emittance
measurements in SPIDER: a fixed electric-sweep scanner (ESS) is proposed for the
integration with the beam-dump; a movable emittance scanner (Allison Scanner
[5]) is proposed for the installation on the movable diagnostic calorimeter. The
peculiarities of a multibeamlet setup are discussed and included in the calcula-
tion of a synthetic signal of the emittance scanners. The constraints given by the
integration in a high heat load component and the thermal design are discussed.
The proposed fixed ESS can be used to reconstruct the beam divergence, even
if the fixed scanner can detect only a limited section of the beamlet emittances,
assuming identical single-beamlet optics. The movable emittance scanner is eas-
ier to integrate in the present design, and allows a full characterization of single
beamlet optics. This work was set up in collaboration and partial financial sup-
port of F4E, and partially under the Fusion Researcher Fellowship granted by
EUROfusion.
Tipologia CRIS:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
SPIDER; high-current multibeamlet beam
Elenco autori:
Serianni, Gianluigi; Pasqualotto, Roberto
Link alla scheda completa: