Helmholtz Association

Plasma stability made to measure

From research conducted at the Max Planck Institute for Plasma Physics
photo control coils installation

Installing control coils in the plasma vessel of the ASDEX Upgrade fusion device. Photo/Graphic: IPP/V. Rohde.Read more

As the buildings go up on the construction site in Cadarache in the south of France where the international ITER fusion test reactor will be housed, physicists around the world are fine-tuning the processes that will take place inside. As the precursor of a demonstration power plant, ITER will produce energy from the fusion of atomic nuclei – much like the sun.

The open questions that are being heatedly debated in this field include the phenomenon of “edge localized modes” – energetic outbursts at the plasma edge. These can damage the wall of the plasma vessel but are also capable of expelling undesirable impurities from the plasma. Hence, what is needed are custom-made (i.e., sufficiently weak) instabilities. For this purpose special control coils were installed on the wall of the plasma vessel in the ASDEX Upgrade fusion device in Garching. Now, after a one-year installation period, the coils have enabled scientists to adjust the plasma instabilities to the required level. This has brought them much closer to answering the question of how the energy generated in the ITER plasma can be smoothly extracted.

Isabella Milch

Media about the subject

Videos

Is Fusion the Energy of the Future?




Links



09.01.2013

Contact

Dr.-Ing. Aurelia Herrmann-Köck

Research Field Energy

Helmholtz Head Office

Phone: +49 30 206329-17
aurelia.herrmann (at) helmholtz.de


Communications and Media

Helmholtz Association

Phone: +49 30 206329-57
presse (at) helmholtz.de