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Cryostat top lid

Last checks before wrapping

On 10 December 2015, a convoy transporting three large steel pieces passed the gates of the ITER installation. Shaped like so many slices of pie, the 50-tonne, 60-degree "segments" were the first elements of the ITER cryostat, the largest and most complex stainless steel high-vacuum chamber ever designed. Over the years that followed, a total of 54 major segments were delivered and progressively assembled to form the four sections of the giant steel cylinder: the base, lower cylinder, upper cylinder and top lid. The base and lower cylinder are now in place inside the Tokamak assembly pit, the upper cylinder is safely stored in its protective cocoon, and the top lid, now finalized, is being prepared for a long hibernation. Because it seals the cryostat, the 665-tonne circular structure will be the last machine component to be lowered into the assembly pit.

Assembly and welding activities for the cryostat top lid began a year ago, in February 2021. At 665 tonnes, the top lid is the second heaviest of all machine assembly components.
"Everything is in place, and within schedule. We just need to do some control and cleaning," explains Guillaume Vitupier, who recently succeeded Anil Bhardwaj as Group Leader for the In-Cryostat, Cryostat Thermal Shield & Auxiliaries Section. In about a week the Indian Domestic Agency, responsible for the procurement, will hand the component over to the ITER Organization—a moment that will mark the conclusion of more than six years of intense work and collaboration between ITER India, cryostat manufacturer Larsen & Toubro Ltd, and the contractor for assembly and welding MAN Energy Solutions.

Of the four sections that make up the ITER cryostat, the top lid is the thickest, second heaviest and most structurally complex. Contrary to the base and lower and upper cylinders, the top lid has a 3D profile, meaning that it is curved in three directions, a bit like a skull cap. "As a consequence, the alignment of the 12 segments, although partially tested in India before shipment, was a very delicate operation here in the Cryostat Workshop," says ITER cryostat engineer Girish Kumar Gupta.

The top lid is also the most structurally complex of the four sections that make up the ITER cryostat. Curved in three directions like a skull cap, it is strengthened by an array of stiffeners and ribs. Here, from left to right: Dipen Shah, from Indian manufacturer Larsen & Toubro; Guillaume Vitupier, leader of the ITER cryostat group; and Girish Kumar Gupta, ITER cryostat engineer.
Metal contraction, due to the heat generated by the welding process, was another challenge. "We had very good profile control throughout the operation, taking metrology measures every other day to monitor the behaviour of the component."

Just like the upper cylinder, finalized in the spring of 2019 and placed in a sealed cocoon outside the Cryostat Workshop, the top lid will also be "mothballed" for protection. This time however, the shape of the component permits a different solution—as efficient but simpler, cheaper and more environmentally friendly. The cryostat top lid will be tightly wrapped in a sheet of material called VCI (volatile corrosion inhibitor) that ensures the long-term protection against humidity and other types of hazards. This solution was already employed for poloidal field coil #2, which was placed into storage in January.

When the last of the cryostat sections is moved into storage in October 2022, the vast Cryostat Workshop will become available for other machine pre-assembly activities.