Assessment of Options for Attractive Commercial and Demonstration Tokamak Fusion Power Plants
- 1 December 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Nuclear Society in Fusion Technology
- Vol. 30 (3P2B) , 1286-1292
- https://doi.org/10.13182/fst96-a11963125
Abstract
The Starlite Project was initiated to investigate the mission, requirements and goals, features, and the R&D needs of the Fusion Demonstration Power Plant based on tokamak confinement concept. It is obvious that the Fusion Demo should demonstrate that a commercial fusion power plant would be accepted by utility and industry (i.e., it is affordable and profitable) and by the general public and government (i.e., it has superior safety and environmental features). Therefore, as the first step in the Starlite project, a set of quantifiable top-level requirements, and goals for both commercial fusion power plants and the Fusion Demo were developed. Next, several candidate options for physics operation regime as well engineering design of various components (e.g., choice of structural material, coolant, breeder) have been developed and assessed. In each area, this assessment was aimed at investigating (1) the potential to satisfy the requirements and goals, and (2) the feasibility e.g., critical issues and credibility (e.g., degree extrapolation required from present data base). This assessment led to the choice of the reversed-shear as the tokamak plasma operation regime and a self-cooled lithium design with vanadium alloy for blanket and in-vessel structures for detailed design. This paper presents a summary of top-level requirements and goals for fusion power and overviews the results of our assessment of tokamak plasma physics and technology options and designs.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- What must DEMO do?Published by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) ,2002
- Starlite economics: requirements and methodsPublished by Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) ,2002
- Criteria for practical fusion power systems: Report from the EPRI fusion panelJournal of Fusion Energy, 1994
- Stabilization of external modes in tokamaks by resistive walls and plasma rotationPhysical Review Letters, 1994
- Improved plasma performance in tokamaks with negative magnetic shearPhysical Review Letters, 1994
- Theory of the tokamak beta limit and implications for second stabilityPhysics of Fluids B: Plasma Physics, 1991