Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
SPIDER experiment, the full size prototype of the beam source for the ITER heating neutral beam injector, has
to demonstrate extraction and acceleration to 100 kV of a large negative ion hydrogen or deuterium beam with coextracted
electron fraction e¯ /D¯ <1 and beam uniformity within 10%, for up to one hour beam pulses. Main RF source
plasma and beam parameters are measured with different complementary techniques to exploit the combination of their
specific features. While SPIDER plant systems are being installed, the different diagnostic systems are in the
procurement phase. Their final design is described here with a focus on some key solutions and most original and cost
effective implementations. Thermocouples used to measure the power load distribution in the source and over the beam
dump front surface will be efficiently fixed with proven technique and acquired through commercial and custom
electronics. Spectroscopy needs to use well collimated lines of sight and will employ novel design spectrometers with
higher efficiency and resolution and filtered detectors with custom built amplifiers. The electrostatic probes will be
operated through electronics specifically developed to cope with the challenging environment of the RF source. The
instrumented calorimeter STRIKE will use new CFC tiles, still under development. Two linear cameras, one built in
house, have been tested as suitable for optical beam tomography. Some diagnostic components are off the shelf, others
are custom developed: some of these are being prototyped or are under test before final production and installation,
which will be completed before start of SPIDER operation.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Electronics; Testing for education; Amplifiers; Electrostatics; Geometrical optics
List of contributors: